1910s Larson-made Stahl Flatback Mandolin
Last summer, a customer of mine asked me about this mandolin which was offered for sale by Intermountain Guitar & Banjo in Utah. She wound-up buying it and I'd never seen it until Friday. She brought it in for a checkup and I gave it the fret level/dress, compensated saddle, and setup it needed. Otherwise it was in really good health and quite clean for an oldy. It only has a couple of very tiny hairline cracks on the top.
Larson-made gear like this (I've worked on many similar Larson flatbacks under various brand names) is classy stuff and always sounds and feels excellent. Their necks are a little more substantial than other makes of the time and -- for me -- they're a much better fit. I find a lot of period necks are a little on the thin and skinny side as far as flatbacks are concerned.
Tonally, these are clean, clear, but lush-sounding. They have a good, warm, low-end response but aren't mushy or tubby like a lot of flatbacks. Materials-wise they're nice, too -- this one is solid spruce over solid Brazilian rosewood and sports a mahogany neck, ebony fretboard and bridge, and bone nut and saddle. It's entirely original as well.
The neck is straight and after work it plays spot-on with hair-under 1/16" action at the 12th fret.
The action was a bit low when it came in, so I shimmed-up the bone saddle slot in the bridge and compensated the saddle at the same time. Strings are 34w-10 gauge or similar.
A back that covers the heel and features binding around its edges is very much a Larson-made trait. The owner was worried about the center-strip on the back being off-center at the heel. I chuckled and explained that -- indeed -- this is handmade. Lots of old instruments are askew in many ways, no matter how well-made they are or how high-end, too.
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