Hah every Gibson I've ever looked at has some slight unevenness to it! If Gibson noticed it and labeled it a "B" stock because of it, it must be bad indeeed! However, if it plays fine and intonates properly, I wouldn't worry about it. You say the frets have been levelled to compensate, and it plays good. Some frets will have less crown as a result, so that may affect future fret dresses, depending on how much they had to compensate. If the guitar is refretted, it depends on the skill of the technician as to whether they can handle it properly. Talk to them and have them tell you exactly how they would do it. There should be no guessing, no "I won't know 'till I get the frets out", or anything like that. It's a very common thing to do during a refret. I use 18 inch long aluminum radius beams to level the fretboard on guitars whenever I do a refret, and have corrected fretboard unevenness on a wide variety of instruments. The reason Gibson fretboards are uneven is because of their build process, IMO.
_________________ Old growth, shmold growth!
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