c.1921 Fairbanks by Vega Style K Banjo Mandolin
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Another Vega banjo-mando gem, almost identical to this (also recent) 1920 style K banjo mando. The old '20s Vegas are the best banjo-mandos out there -- they have unfailingly sweet tone -- which is especially important on an instrument that can be really brash and unforgiving a lot of the time.
This one dates by its serial to 1921 and features a solid mahogany neck, maple pot with a hoop style tonering, ebony fretboard, and all-original fittings except for its bridge and head.
This one dates by its serial to 1921 and features a solid mahogany neck, maple pot with a hoop style tonering, ebony fretboard, and all-original fittings except for its bridge and head.
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Bone nut, ebony headstock veneer. Original tuners work great. Strings are 28w-22w-12-09 (this lighter-than-normal gauge is best for banjo mandos).
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MOP dots. Some stable hairline cracks in the ebony board. These are bar frets.
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It's certainly a cute little thing. The head is a newer Remo frosted-on-top synthetic head.
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Usually I use a heavier, more mandolin-style bridge when I setup banjo mandolins. This time I went for a lighter-weight banjo style bridge (1/2" maple/ebony Grover) and opted to mellow the instrument out a little bit with a mute for the extra string length under the tailpiece and a very small pad of foam pressed up against the head under the fretboard extension. Both of these remove overtones and harsh "ping" in the same manner that a lot of modern drum heads use a rubber gasket around the outer edge of the head to slightly mute overtones on snares and toms.
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It's a beautiful little no-frills instrument -- and the matching in terms of finish/stain between the maple and the mahogany is first rate.
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All-original hardware means every hook, nut, and shoe is heavy-duty, quality Vega stuff.
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Good solid heel and good-quality, easily-adjustable neck brace.
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Both the neck and pot serials match.
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Did I mention the band of tortoise binding on the bottom edge of the pot? Classy addition.
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...and the neck also has some subtle flame to the mahogany.
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Desirable tailpiece cover still in place.
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...and it has its original "side saddle" case -- though the bottom flap needs some attention if it's to be used for anything than storage.
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