I've bound all my fretboards to date. Here's how I do it.
Slot the board, taper to the desired dimensions MINUS the binding thickness, glue on the binding either with tape or a jig of some sort. I made a jig which is just a piece of flat plywood with two runners, one screwed down, the other is just clamped in place with the fretboard and binding set in dry. I than take out the fretboard and binding, apply the glue and put it back in the jig with some wax paper on the bottom so the board doesn't stick to the jig. I tap the board into the taper to get the bindings tight and I also tap down on the binding and the board to make sure the bottom of each is level one with the other. After this is all done, I use my compressor to blow out the glue squeeze out in the fret slots (thanks to Paul Woolson & Charles Fox). I just hold a rag over the fret slot and spray the glue out. Works great with no cleaning of the slot required.
Take the board out of the jig a couple hours later and scrape the bottom glue squeeze out with a rigid scraper, making sure the bottom remains level.
Your ready to profile the top to your desired radius (if this is when you do it) or glue it to your neck. Fret when ever your proceedure allows.
When fretting the first 4 guitars I filed the tang of the fret away which wasn't to bad, but since I got the Stew Mac fret tang nipper and I wish I had it for the first 4. It removes the tang perfectly and quickly.
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My Facebook Guitar Page"There's really no wrong way, as long as the results are what's desired." Charles Fox
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