5/29/2023 0 Comments Banjo capoPurchase of any non-licenced part as a replacement spare part is at your own risk. We ask that you research parts carefully before buying. Please contact our team for further clarification. Changes could include, different stands, treatments, slight variations in colour, In-built batteries and charging ports. (d) The products shown in the images above product may differ to the purchased product. (c) Goods ordered were subject to an error on the Website, for example, in relation to a description, price or image, which was not discovered prior to the Order being accepted (b) an event beyond Mooloolaba Music's control, such as storm, fire, flood, earthquake, terrorism, power failure, war, strike or failure of computer systems, means that Mooloolaba Music is unable to supply the Goods within a reasonable time Mooloolaba Music may do this for example, but without limitation, where:Ī) Mooloolaba Music's suppliers are unable to supply Goods that they have previously promised to supply Mooloolaba Music reserves the right to cancel, at any time before delivery and for whatever reason, an Order that it has previously accepted. If you do want photos beofre making a purchase please call our shop where one of our staff can assist in sending more detailed images. We take careful and meticulous care, boxing and cleaning of your product before the shipping or selling of an item. Please Note: This item may be on display at the Mooloolaba Music Shop and may have been available for demonstration to in store patrons. If you feel that you want to be able to capo all the way up to the thirteenth fret, the original eight inch, three-screw bar is still available. Besides taking up less space on the neck (for you fellow thumb-wrappers), it offers the additional advantage of using only TWO mounting screws instead of three. This shorter bar is now our standard size. So for my own banjo, I made a custom bar which was much shorter (5.75"). I personally never capo the fifth string any higher than the tenth fret (this would go along with the regular capo being at the fifth fret). A few years ago we remodeled the bar, a change which I'd long considered. Originally, our fifth string capo bar was eight inches long, and attached to the banjo neck with three mounting screws. It slides on a slim, dovetailed bar which mounts flush to the neck, making it sturdy and unobtrusive. It operates on a lever principle, not a spring, so it provides sufficient pressure to fret the string without muting the tone. This was the product that got it all started for us back in 1974, and to this day it's STILL the only fifth string capo worth putting on a banjo.
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