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Reviews (8)

07 Jul, 2020
It works...
Seems to work as a generic replacement for old one with holes.

24 Jan, 2018
Bows can make a difference in sound
I bought a bow. It arrived broken, and returning it was no problem. I bought another bow, and started trying to learn with it. The sound it produced wasn't great, but I lived with it and thought ,"Hey, it's a bow, what effect could it have..." Then I bought this bow, suddenly the sound I was making improved. I also fixed the original bow that I was told to keep when I got the refund. Once again, this fixed bow sounded better than the second bow I'd purchased. (I bought a piece of copper water pipe, split it lengthwise, and clamped it over the upper part of the bow that was broken and glued it in place.) I built a "Bach bow", and even IT sounds better than the others.
My conclusion is that you should not ignore either your bow or your resin. BOTH can have an effect on the sound you're producing. (Just a little "head up" for beginners.)

22 Feb, 2017
Put strings on a new violin I just built....
0 of 1 found this helpful I know nothing of violins or strings, I haven't even learned to play the instrument yet. I just finished building and setting up a violin. The strings seem to not put too much pressure on the instrument. At least they don't seem to collapse the wood. I don't know very much about strings, but these indicate they are very light tension. I tuned to GDAE, and no damage yet. The strings do stretch a lot. I have to keep retuning. I presume this isn't due to the instrument slowly collapsing. I'll keep my fingers crossed. Vibrato doesn't seem to work with them. Maybe its the design, or my lack of skill. The strings do work, and are sufficiently low tension to permit me to tune to GDAE and not damage instrument. That's really all I know right now. They sound pretty good when I bow them without putting fingers on fingerboard.