1890s Fairbanks Special No.1 5-String Openback Banjo
This A.C. Fairbanks was built by the firm themselves -- rather than in cooperation with Vega -- if I'm remembering my history correctly. It has the usual 1890s features of a Fairbanks, too, with a good-quality spunover rim full of rugged hardware, an ingenious (for the time) shoe-mounted "neck brace" on the dowel, the typical Fairbanks-style headstock shape, and a sturdy "Boston" build.
Strung like they were intended, for gut or nylon (nylon is on it), a banjo like this one simply sounds full, glorious and feels great under the fingers. A lot of people make the mistake of trying to turn these into steel-strung "old-time" banjos, and so often lose the point of this sort of design in a tone that might get a bit muddy or saturated with overtones. Not to mention, steel tends to warp the neck on a banjo of this age after a while.
I worked on this for a consignor (as it turned-out... I forgot at the time that he'd wanted to sell it!) and it received a new Remo Renaissance head, a fret level/dress, and a good going-through and setup. Everything on the banjo is original save the head, 1920s-era two-foot bridge, tailpiece, and strings. As it is now it sounds and feels awfully close to what it must've been like when it was new. I set the action for gut/nylon-strung banjos at 3/32" at the 12th fret, though the 1/2" bridge leaves some room to come down to 1/16" at the 12th if the player has a very light touch.
This is a full-size banjo with a 26" scale length, 10 7/8" rim, and 1 1/4" nut width. It's got a no-frills look but is certainly a quality build.
Amazingly, despite years of service running a light set of steel strings, the original celluloid violin-style friction pegs remain in good shape and keep the banjo nicely in-tune.
The fretboad and headstock veneer appear to be ebony, though there's a chipped-out area of the headstock veneer just north of nut under the D&G strings which I repaired.
The original bone 5th-string "pip" (nut) is still extant. I didn't want to level the small original frets entirely down, so while the neck is essentially dead straight, there's still a ~1/64" overall relief in the neck if you measure it. This does not effect playability in the least.
The board has pearl dots inlaid and the neck profile is a medium-sized soft-V/U hybrid shape.
When I set the banjo up, I added a couple of shims for extra back-angle at the top of the heel. These days I layer-up sticky-backed pickguard material to the tension hoop so that it doesn't move around if you need to remove the neck for some reason.
The 1920s two-foot bridge came with it and I reused it after work. It sounds great! I did some bridge-swapping and liked the direct, warm tone of this one over my usual all-maple "minstrel" bridges for this application.
The neck looks like it's made from dark-stained maple.
It's nice to see all that hardware in such relatively good shape. A lot of banjos from this era get pretty grungy.
Here's the cute little neck brace you see on many old Fairbanks builds. This is a far more practical way to keep a neck tight to the rim compared to the usual "hammer in some shims" neck brace of the same period.
The replacement tailpiece is a No-Knot repro that came with the banjo and it has a new hanger-bolt, too. The endbolt is original but I've added a spacer-washer to allow the tailpiece to rest more appropriately.
Comments
This banjo is in good shape. Wood tuners not carved. Neck straight, frets not worn, calf skin head. Was missing 4 hooks that I replaced with some Deering hooks I had laying around. It had three light steel strings on it.
I cleaned it up and put some LaBella nylons on it. With an old wool sock in the pot it has a great “plunky” old time sound.
Biggest issue is a high action despite a 1/2” possibly original bridge. Any suggestions on how to best lower the action?
Tuners weren’t holding tune but some Core peg wax has helped.
Your opinion on keeping as original as possible or possibly upgrading tuners, head…
Any idea of value?
Thanks!
Steve