1950s Harmony Baritone Ukulele
How many more of these can I work on? I feel like this model is never-ending! I see at least a few each year. Most are not as nice as this early-'50s style one, though. These earlier ones have thinner body wood, lighter bracing, and thinner/faster necks. Of course... they sound better because of that.
Per standard '50s features it's got a solid mahogany body throughout and a mahogany neck. The board and bridge are rosewood and the nut and saddle are bone. It's original and crack-free, too, save one tiny hairline (repaired) below the bridge on the top. The bridge has some rolled-over edges on its foot from a sloppy old bridge repair (probably from sanding) but it's now on there good and tight.
I decided to string this one up with "all plain" flurocarbon (the low G D'Addario tenor uke set, EJ99TLG) in standard DGBE tuning and it sounds great with these -- though a lighter attack helps keep the floppier low strings sounding nice. It'll work with "standard" two-wound, two-plain just fine, too.
Repairs included: neck reset, bridge reglue, fret level/dress, side dots install, cleaning, setup.
Made by: Harmony
Made in: Chicago, IL, USA
Top wood: solid mahogany
Back & sides wood: solid mahogany
Bracing type: ladder
Bridge: rosewood
Fretboard: rosewood
Neck wood: mahogany
Action height at 12th fret: 1/16" overall (fast)
String gauges: D'Addario EJ99TLG fluorocarbon
Neck shape: slim D
Board radius: flat
Neck relief: straight
Fret style: medium-small brass
Scale length: 19 1/4"
Nut width: 1 1/4"
Body length: 13 5/8"
Body width: 10"
Body depth: 3 3/8"
Weight: 1 lb 13 oz
Condition notes: it's original throughout and has only mild scratches/scuffing here and there. The finish looks good. There's a very shallow/narrow (repaired) hairline crack on the top below the bridge that was impossible to shoot with the camera.
It comes with: a period chip case in OK shape.
Comments