Friday, March 16, 2007

How to install a new head badly. Sorry!

For those of you who are wondering, is he still working on the banjo? Yes. Yes I am. Dont have to think twice about that. So today, March 16, 2007, I went out to Webster st. and took the initiative and bought a new banjo head. Coming home a little later while. I just was aching to install it. And of all things graceful and good. It fit! So now, I started and resumed work. Happily and bubbling along. I set off to finish my senior project.

So those of you who have read this before, this is my other desk. My working drafting desk with a 2000 dollar drafting machine on it. Its a 1954 Drafting table and its lasted a long time. Despite the profanity marred on it in random areas.

So since I decided to stray away from using the floor as my working surface, I had to protect my instrument as well as my desk. So Lay out a towel just to be safe. Dont use the nice ones!

This is pretty much where we last left off. The banjo was pretty much reassembled to the extent of the neck, rods and wall lugs.

So there's the tone ring on. Waiting for a new head. Theres a small notch running around allowing for the rolled piece of steel to fit in it and the head sits on top of the ring therefore, does not make any contact with the wood rim at all. But allows a free clear ringing tone.

And here are the two heads. The top one with the nasty looking yellow glue is the old head. A frosted bottom type head with a shiny top. Yuck. The bottom one is a new fyberskin head I bought for 10 dollars. What a deal! These usually run for 17 dollars. As well as my luck in managing to get one that acutualy fit! For those of you who dont know. Fyberskin is a synthetic material like a regular banjo head. But with the same tonal qualities of skin. But without the drastic changes with temperature and humidity.

So with the tone ring put on for a test, see the notch? The head AND the hoop has to go there. And with that neck and the flaws, its a difficult task certainly.

So there's the head attempted and wedged into place. Its not clean nor is it pretty.

Tension hooks, ready for the hoop. Not yet actually. But what I did was dump them onto the old head and started threading some of them through the holes.

By doing that, you kinda can reach a tension equality without having to do that for individual pieces. Or maybe its just easier that way.

Well, theres the hoop in place. The hooks latch on with the flat face onto it and it works nicely. Although i'm not a big fan of the easy slippage.

So I had to stick the tailpiece on just to make sure it'll fit fine. Yes it does.

And somehow in the process, that little overlap of the hook you see at the bottom got off centered so when I finished, I had to re do the entire thing. But here's the start of the bad version. Some of the hooks are in place, some arent.

Now, its with all the hooks in place, but it looks rather odd doesnt it? The right side has too much slack in the material for some reason. This started to scare me.

I started off using a very bad small monkey wrench. It was finky and it didnt work too well. I ended up tightening the things with just my fingers. Which was a very bad idea.

Another view of me tightening. Note my ugly left wrist.

The process continues

And continues

Until all thirty hooks are in, tightened at the same tension. But then, at this point, I noticed the overlap is offcenter.

I think this is from the second time I put the head on. This time, I had a better system. Espically now that i had the quarter inch tool to make life easier.

Reinstalling the last hook. It took me forever just to get that far.

Yes, i'm a Notre Dame fan

So there's what it looks like competed. All hooks done. But note, there's still a slack in the material at the lower right. And I ended redoing the hooks. I didnt take any pictures for that, Sorry. But The idea is still the same. Only then, I had the hex turner.

So my new tailpiece, the waverly model is rather nice. Kinda heavy. Tension adjustable. That's good an all. Luckily, it managed to cover up the overlap in the hoop.

So the process is done. Notice how the hoop is centered and I just test it quickly with a drum stick to see if theres a consistent tension all around. If not, some things need to be tightened and some loosened. Well, just tightened. :)

Update edit: Note. When tightening your nuts, hooks will have a tendency to slip around and not have a good grip on the hoop. So what I found which works best for me and the equipment that i have was to take a soft cloth and a finishing hammer and knock the hooks into place to make full contact.

Happy Strumming!

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