Yeah, thanks Howard, I think I’m seeing the light at the end of the tunnel now. I won’t try to describe the neck/pot attachment mechanism, but upon removing the neck from the banjo, I found it stunningly simple and easy to duplicate. I probably can’t describe it correctly, but it is basically a 13/32” hole drilled into the base of the neck along the longitudinal axis into which a 3/8” threaded rod is installed with a 5/32” hole drilled in the nutward end of the rod which is held in place by a 1/8” wood screw intersecting the rod hole through a 1/8” hole drilled in the bottom of the neck. Neck attachment is no problem. As long as I get the spacing right for the dowel holes, I think I will be OK. My extension piece is larger than the neck in all dimensions including length. If it turns out after assembly the extension material interferes with the action, I’ll simply remove extension material with a rasp until acceptable clearance is achieved. The neck will initially be overly long by about a half inch and I should be able to make the final radial arm saw cut to length to 1/32” tolerance. If I discover problems with angularity on either of the three axis, I see no reason I can’t shim the neck/pot contact point to correct. Iida saw no reason to shim it. The Iida 225 was about a five hundred dollar banjo. But as I’ve been carefully dissecting it, I find remarkably rinky dink assembly features for what passed for a flashy instrument. If effort didn’t show, apparently Iida didn’t make much. But the aluminum pot casting seems to have acceptable integrity. I hope I’m not overlooking esoteric issues here. I knew the banjo neck had a gentle, consistent radial counterclockwise twist along the length of the neck amounting to ¾ level bubble. I was always unsure if this was a defect, or maybe an intentional manufacturing feature. It didn’t affect the playing of the banjo. When I was making measurements and trying to understand everything as well as I could, I placed the machinist level on my perfectly performing Takamine classical guitar and discovered a corresponding twist. But it was clockwise by half a bubble. Are these necks supposed to be straight longitudinally? I really don’t want to overlook some known stringed instrument feature and screw my little job up. Thanks again,, Charlie Roper
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