2011 Clay Alden Flatback Mandolin
This is an attractive, good-sounding, functional, and cool-looking Army/Navy-style (or pancake-style) mandolin. It was made by Clay Alden in Tennessee and appears to be a cedar-topped (or maybe pine?) instrument with, perhaps, cocobolo (or similar) back and sides. It's pretty plain (no binding) and workmanly but has "the right stuff" to be a good player. I only had to give it some compensation at the bridge and a setup to be able to hang it out in the shop.
While it's a newer instrument and overall kept in good order, the top shows a bunch of scritchy-scratch wear to it. I'm not surprised at that because it's a rather soft wood, however. I've been letting it settle-in to Vermont before listing it for sale and it's held-up spot-on over our weather changes during the last few weeks.
It has a pickup installed which is of the undersaddle variety. It sounds just fine but I would be happy to install a K&K to replace it if desired -- for a small uptick in pricing. The undersaddle pickups tend to have a midsier, hyped tone you have to finesse with EQ to get to sound like you'd want while the K&Ks are much more natural-sounding.
Repairs included: a quick setup.
- Weight: 1 lb 14 oz
- Scale length: 13 7/8"
- Nut width: 1 1/8"
- Neck shape: medium C/D
- Board radius: flat
- Body width: 9 1/2"
- Body depth: 1 7/8"
- Top wood: solid cedar? pine?
- Back & sides wood: solid cocobolo?
- Bracing type: x
- Bridge: ebony
- Fretboard: ebony
- Neck wood: mahogany
- Action height at 12th fret: hair-under 1/16" overall (fast, spot-on)
- String gauges: 34w-10 or similar
- Truss rod: adjustable
- Neck relief: straight
- Fret style: narrow/medium
Condition notes: while it has some scritchy-scratch to the top and a little usewear throughout, it's overall clean-ish but "player grade."
It comes with: a TKL hard case -- which is nice -- but the "case pocket" needs to be fit back into it.
Consignor tag: RC
Comments
so soft and hardness similar to cedar and cocobolo