I have an old friend down here in Mexico that told me some time back that she had an old guitar
that her grandfather had given her, but wasn't sure were it was. I was curious to see it, but never got the chance until recently when it was rediscovered in an attic. My friend brought it over to my place to see if I could fix it up. When I opened the dusty broken chipboard case, low and behold there was a little Martin 5-18 hiding in there!
A bit worse for the wear, it had been mistreated and neglected, rode hard and put away wet, but it was in sound structural shape. I cleaned it up, replaced the worn out tuners, lowered the saddle a bit, put some new pins in & strung it up. It's has beautiful sweet sound, smooth action. Part of me didn't want to give it back.
I don't see very many fine guitars down here in this neck of the woods, so it was a real surprise to have this one happen along. It's kind of amazing that it was still together after the hard life it's had, 50 yrs. old. Whoever had used it had no idea what they had. How some fine guitars get treated is enough to give
you the blues.
I convinced the owner to give the guitar to her daughter, who was enthusiastic about learning to play it.
I coached her on how to take care of it and hope that it remains in their family as an heirloom. I feel very
fortunate to get to know one of these little guitars and I think I would like to try to build one now.
This is how it looked when it was dropped off:
Attachment:
5-18a.jpg
Attachment:
5-18b.jpg
Attachment:
5-18c.jpg
Here it is cleaned up and ready to go for another round:
Attachment:
Martin 5-18 1958.jpg
As I understand these "terz" guitars are meant to be tuned up 3 half steps. I was a little
bit afraid to tune it up that high, so I tuned it up to the standard E tuning. But when I capoed
it up 3 frets it does have a very nice high sound (not lonesome though) - a lilting ring.
I recommended light or extra light gauge strings, that seemed like the right thing.
Just thought I'd share this,
john