Well i put this into build and repair, i can't find better place even if i wouldn't call this thread about building... well...
After two years of a little experiment, time to share!
My octava mandolin is too big for low-cost hand luggage airplane companies, and i found myself many times during travelling longing an instrument to play, one day i jumped into a store and bought a uku for 25 euros....
since then, when there is no place for sweet octava, uku is coming... (it survived australian warm and humid west coast, south corea, dry south europe summers, russia...)
But i wanted to keep the practice of the mando, so...
With a bit of adjusting, i lowered the bridge, the fret 0, and put some metallic strings...
strings are around:
E .007
A .011
D .016
G .024
The good thing of metallic string is that it comes much closer to a mandolin sound (well no double string of course!)
I didn't go straight away for GDAE, kept it a good tone and a half lower for a while... the neck started to bend, lowered down... i a few weeks, playing a lot on it, the cheap chinese made mahalo started to understand the new treatment, and now i can tune it nearly to normal, but most of the time F# (for safety reasons!). When playing with people a capo does the trick...
It is after a year actually staying pretty on tune... but still a bit off when i play over 8th/10th fret.
But i love this instrument, i can just have it in a bag in case... play it around when i have 5 minutes waiting!
That makes a playable mandolin for 30 bucks!
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