Hi, I am new and building my first cigar box banjo using a neck recovered from an electric guitar. I want five strings but my bandsaw will burn out trying to reshape the top of the neck. Can I run the 5th string up to the head but tune it to the octave G? Or should i be settling for 4 strings and tune it as a tenor banjo? All suggestions welcome. Thanks, tina

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  • Thanks for all the suggestions. I will be stringing it tomorrow.
    I would try the tenor banjo route except I have just started learning 5 strings and don't want to get confused with a different tuning.
  • Many Victorian 5 string banjos used a 6 string neck (leaving a redundant machinehead)  and ran the 5th string in a 'tunnel' under the fretboard from the 5th fret to the headstock. You can achieve a similar effect by using a "railroad spike" in the fretboard behind the 5th fret. The string simply hooks underneath and you've got your octave G in the right place. Spikes available from most banjo outfitters, StewMac etc...but I'm sure you could nip the head off a panel pin and bend it to get the same result. Just drill the fretboard with a really small drill (I used a .5mm drill last time I did this on a banjo) to make sure the spike goes in without bending.

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  • 'Course you can. There are no rules. Keith Richards uses 5 strings on his Tele, tuned to Open G.
  • Going the tenor banjo route would certainly be easier. Just leave the high and low strings off and just use the center 4 strings.

  • I did one with all 5 stings mounted at the head. the neck was too thin to put 5th string tuner on the side. Played just fine with the 5th string mounted that way.

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