1970s Cortez Resonator 5-String Archtop Banjo
Overview: This appears to be a rather ho-hum '70s Japanese banjo, but the Cortez branding belies the fact that it's actually a nicer-grade Iida model with different appointments and branding and under the hood it has an all-aluminum, archtop-style rim design. That gives it the "bluegrass archtop" sound with a hair more warmth and focus and a ton less weight. This thing is only 6 1/2 lbs as compared to your average 10-12 lb bluegrass banjo and it punches-out well and sounds good doing it.
The best part, however, is that this banjo was bought from Dan Tyminski's ex-wife and she mentioned to the last owner that it was a banjo of his when he was younger. How about that? Needless to say, this thing was "already sold" to my pal Owen the moment he needed a banjo and heard the story. He's been patiently waiting for me to get around to finishing the work on it...
Repairs included: Max gave it a level/dress of the frets and I gave it a going-over, teardown/buildup, cleaning, and setup work.
- Weight: 6 lbs 8 oz
- Scale length: 26 3/8"
- Nut width: 1 3/16"
- Neck shape: medium C oval
- Board radius: flat
- Depth at first fret: 7/8"
- Depth at seventh fret: 15/16"
- Head diameter: 11”
- Resonator diameter: 13 5/8"
- Depth overall at rim: 3 1/2"
- Rim & tonering: aluminum, one-piece, archtop construction
- Bridge: ebony/maple
- Fretboard: rosewood
- Neck wood: mahogany
- Action height at 12th fret: 1/16" overall (fast, spot-on)
- String gauges: 10s
- Truss rod: adjustable
- Neck relief: straight
- Fret style: medium-lower
Condition notes: It has some light scratches and scuffs here and there but is overall nice and clean. I replaced the original 5th peg with a geared Gotoh one. The head is original (or close to it) and has a tiny little hot-point hole in it (that's stable). I added a neck-stabilisation bolt through the interior of the rim and into the bottom of the heel to lock its position.
It comes with: Sorry, no case.
Consignor tag: JW



















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