I'd have to see it in person before I proceeded on any path. Advising someone to do their own neck reset when they are not experienced with same is also not something that I would advise either. No offense intended, I want you to have a great outcome and have no idea what your abilities are. Some instruments are a PITA as well regardless of your abilities.
What I did want to offer though is an alternative that's less invasive, may get you where you want to go, and only will take around several hours tops, likely less.
It's possible for those of us who do lots of fret work to change the neck angle or more specifically the angle of the fret plane in either direction for lower or higher action with a precision fret dress. If the neck is conducive to this, a skilled Luthier would be capable of determining this with an in person look, the fret dress can concentrate material removal in the region of the first several frets.
This combined with nixing the ski-ramp of the over body frets can at times belay the need for a neck reset for years and possibly eliminate it entirely.
An easy way to think of the process is milling down height on the frets near the nut, preserving height of the frets at the 12th, killing the ski ramp, etc. Although the neck remains at the very same angle the fret plane as the string see the frets changes angle. This also increases break angle over the bridge without raising the bridge or changing the position of the Bigsby.
We do this technique often and it often saves the day for folks on a budget or an instrument that invasive work is not desirable unless it's a last resort.
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