1910s Lange-made Eko Banjo-Mandolin
While it says "Eko" on the headstock, this is not the '50s/'60s/'70s EKO brand from Italy most of you know. It's "Echo" misspelled. I've seen a few of this brand turn-up from the 1910s and '20s era and most of them seem to be Lange-made products (from New York) to my eyes.
This one's nice-quality, rugged, and reliable. The neck is tough and straight (with center-strip lamination) and has pretty flamed maple in it and is topped with an ebony board. The rim is thick ply-maple with maple veneer on the outside.
I worked on this for a local customer and while I wanted to replace the skin head with synthetic for ease-of-use, its hair-under-10" size proves problematic for that -- one would need to order a head custom from Remo and wait... wait... wait for it. Still, after glorified setup work and a new bridge, this thing was ready to go and has that classic horse-cloppy sound to it that sits so nicely in its own niche on recordings.
Repairs included: a fret level/dress, side dots install, cleaning, new compensated rosewood mandolin-style bridge (to replace a teensy period banjo-style bridge -- the mando-style long foot means tuning stability is greatly-increased and it sounds fuller), and setup.
Setup notes: the neck is straight, the frets are low/small per original spec, and it plays bang-on with 1/16" action at the 12th fret. Strings are GHS A240s -- 32w-9 in gauges -- and they're perfect for bowlbacks, vintage (fragile) mandolins, and banjo-mandolins. People often make the mistake of stringing these with 34w-10 or heavier gauges and they're a nightmare to play and keep in tune. Period strings are like the GHS A240s or even a tad lighter. Note also that I've put a damping-pad of foam behind the head near the fretboard extension and I've also muted the extra string length at the tailpiece-end.
Scale length: 13 5/8"
Nut width: 1 1/8"
String spacing at nut: 7/8"
String spacing at bridge: 1 1/2"
Head diameter: 10"
Rim depth: 2 3/4"
Rim material: maple multi-ply
Neck wood: maple
Fretboard wood: ebony
Bridge: new compensated rosewood
Neck feel: slim C-shape, flat board
Condition notes: it's in very good shape and all-original save the side dots and new bridge. It shows wear and tear to the finish but it's still nice and clean otherwise.
Comments
What a treat to hear it, and I hope Andy gets many years of enjoyment out of it!