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Hi, there are plenty of these on ebay, but given the age of them I would rather get one that has been properly restored by a luthier who knows about this instrument - is this possible?
Ritchie
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Thanks for postig those pictures, Richard. Looks like it's in very good condition.
So who were the builders of the Vibrante and the Vibrante Royal models? Are they known? Are there any differences between the different makes?
mine is probably half that, yes its a poor example.
I like the Weigh Your Banjo suggestion, Richard. My bathroom scale measures only in pounds and fifths of a pound, No ounces and no grams. It's ok like that? For instance my 1909 Bacon Professional FF weighs 6.2 pounds on my scale. If this is a useful number for your proposed project I will weigh and post the weights of my other banjos, Perhaps a new topic and thread is called for?
HA! I might be older than you :-) and I don't wanna be in charge of nuttin' neither. I got a "full plate" these days. But does anyone need to be in charge?
Richard William Ineson said:
I think that it's an interesting project which has not been tackled before, I'm too old to be in charge of anything but if you feel able to coordinate the necessary work I would be glad to weigh my banjos and submit the results for listing.
So I have been doing up the dodgy no-name ZB - new head, correct strings, dismantled and cleaned everything - even took the tuners (non-original friction tuners) apart. It kind of works, but I think it would be better with a few more changes - e.g new hoop, replacement hardware, new fingerboard and frets, new tuners, maybe the whole neck. Yes then it would be perfect.
What is the point of the different types of strings, sounds a bit weird to me.
Well first of all it is not at all weird to have a string instrument with strings of different materials, Every type of guitar is like that for instance. Even instruments having entirely unwound metal strings such as sitar or sarode in India have some strings of steel and some of brass or bronze.
That said, the point is
1) to allow the zither-banjo to play the music that was composed for it. It is a polyphonic instrument with three voices which are brought about or made more distinct by the different string materials.
2) to prevent the instrument from sounding hideous. All nylon and it sounds like a Gibson Mattress-tone. All metal and it sounds a tin can with strings. Really awful.
ritchie thomson said:
What is the point of the different types of strings, sounds a bit weird to me.
Friction tuners on a zither banjo? I have never seen that before. Please post pictures of the banjo.
That repair-work is called "buying-a-new-banjo". Lots of people on here do it all the time! :-)
ritchie thomson said:
It kind of works, but I think it would be better with a few more changes - e.g new hoop, replacement hardware, new fingerboard and frets, new tuners, maybe the whole neck. Yes then it would be perfect.
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