This invention relates generally to capotastos or “capos,” and, in particular, to a capo adapted for use with Dobro and slide guitars, and other raised-string instruments.
A capo is a device used to shorten the string length on guitars and other musical instruments, thereby facilitating upward transposition without altered fingering. The term has European roots: “capotasto,” from Italian, “capo” meaning “head” and “tasto” meaning “tie, fret, or key.” In French the capo is called a barre, and in German, capodaster). Originally this term denoted the nut of a fretted instrument such as the lute or guitar. The term was first employed by G. B. Doni in his annotazioni of 1640. The term “capo” is now used to describe a device used to shorten string length, thereby facilitating upward transposition relative to the fret board without altered fingering.
According to the Sterner Capo Museum (http://web.telia.com/˜u86505074/capomuseum), the first capo was invented in the mid 1700's. Both the yoke capo with screw and the wooden Spanish capo cejilla were invented in the late 1700's. The yoke capo looks substantially the same today, and the Spanish capo is still in use by Flamenco guitarists. On English guitars at that time, the capo was attached through holes in the neck by a small carriage bolt tightened by a wing nut.
The first U.S. patent on the capo was U.S. Pat. No. 7,279, entitled “Guitar Head,” which issued in 1850 to James Ashborn. As shown in
Two capos still in use today include the Bill Russell capo and the Jim Dunlop capo. The Bill Russell capo is the subject of U.S. Pat. No. 1,788,636, entitled “Capo Tasto” (
The Jim Dunlop capo is the subject of U.S. Pat. No. 3,185,012, also entitled “Capo Tasto” (
The first patented plastic capo is described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,823,247 (
As might be expected, there are specialized capos for specialized guitars. One specialized guitar, the Dobro®, has been around since the mid 1920's. The Dobro trademark is now owned by the famous maker Gibson. Guitars of this type, built by independent guitar makers, are referred to as resonator, or, resophonic, guitars.
Resophonic guitars arose out of a need for a louder acoustic instrument, able to compete with the trumpets, saxophones and banjos that dominated popular music in the 1920s. As the story goes, George Beauchamp, a Los Angeles guitarist, took his vision of a mechanically amplified instrument to John Dopyera and his brother Rudy, Slovakian immigrants who had already patented several improvements for banjos. John Dopyera perfected a design utilizing three aluminum cones, Rudy suggested a metal body to enhance amplification, and the National tri-cone resonator guitar debuted in 1927. John Dopyera left National in 1928 and began developing a more affordable wood body guitar with a single cone and a spider-like bridge base. He introduced his new invention by the end of 1928 under the name DOBRO®—a combination of Dopyera and “brothers.”
Dobro guitars, like some slide guitars, are typically played on the musician's lap. Since the strings are spaced a considerable distance from the finger board, traditional clamping-type capos either will not work, will damage the instrument, or both. Thus, specialized capos were invented. Although some of the capos do extend around the back of the neck, most models do not and instead ‘float’ on the strings.
One of the first commercially produced floating capos is the Huckabee capo, developed in the early 1980s. With this design, a thin, round bar with plastic tubing, pulls the strings up towards a heavy, square bar by means of a screw and a wing nut. Along the bottom side of the square bar there is a routed grove to give it two distinct edges against the strings and the strings are pulled into that grove. The round bar is the Beard capo, designed by Paul E. Beard in 1985. Referring to
This invention resides in a capo for Dobro® and slide guitars, and other raised-string instruments. In contrast to previous designs, the capo is lever-operated and compression adjustable, enabling one-handed placement and removal and precise, consistent chord formation.
The preferred embodiment includes a bar member having length defined by two ends, an upper surface, and a lower surface adapted for string contact. A sliding link member extends through a central bore in the bar member, the link member having an upper end positioned above the upper surface of the bar member and a lower end positioned below the lower surface of the bar member. A clamping member extends through a bore formed through the lower end of the link member, the clamping member having two opposing arms extending away from the link member, each arm terminating proximate to a respective end of the bar member. An adjustment arm, pivotally coupled to the upper end of the link member, includes a first end with an adjustment mechanism that engages with the upper surface of the bar member, a second end pivotally coupled to a clamping lever. The clamping lever includes user-graspable portion and a corner spaced apart from the pivotal attachment to the link member, such that when the user-graspable portion of the lever is folded down onto the upper surface of the bar member, the clamping member is brought sufficiently close to the lower surface of the bar member to trap strings disposed therebetween to effectuate a chord formation, and when the user-graspable portion of the lever is lifted up and away from the upper surface of the bar member, the strings are released, allowing the capo to be removed or repositioned.
The bar member includes a longitudinal groove, thereby creating a string-contacting edge. The central bore through the bar member is square or otherwise non-circular to ensure that the clamping member and the bar member are at all times substantially parallel. In the preferred embodiment the clamping member defines a cross-sectional area which is less than the cross-sectional area of the bore formed through the lower end of the link member, thereby allowing the clamping member to slightly pivot and accommodate strings of graduating diameter. The two opposing arms of the clamping member are covered with a compressible, resilient sleeve. The preferred clamping lever is generally triangular in shape, and a spring disposed between the bottom surface of the bar member and the clamping member biases the clamping member away from the bar member. At least the bar member is constructed from brass or other substantially heavy material, and the preferred adjustment mechanism is a set screw.
In the preferred embodiment, the pivotal coupling of the adjustment arm to the upper end of the link member is positioned closer to the link member than to the adjustment mechanism, and the adjustment mechanism is proximate to one of the ends of the bar member.
Referring now to the drawings,
At the upper end of the link member 104, an adjustment arm is pivotally attached at 112. One end of the adjustment arm 106 is pivotally attached to a lever 108, with the other end of the adjustment arm, including a set screw 114 or other such device to raise and lower that end of the adjustment arm relative to the top surface of the bar member 102. The clamp member 116 has opposing arms covered with polymeric sleeves 118 on either end to ensure a positive grip on strings 100 when the lever 108, pivotally attached to adjustment arm 106 at point 110, is folded down onto the top of the bar member 102, as shown.
In the preferred embodiment, the bore formed through the bottom portion of the link member 104 is slightly larger than the size of the clamp member 116, to facilitate a limited degree of tilting movement and to accommodate the change in string diameters from high pitched to bass. The spring 120 is also provided to bias the clamp member 116 away from the bar member 102 when the lever is lifted up, releasing the strings, as shown in
The geometry of the adjustment arm 106, as well as the pivot points 110, 112 and position of adjustment screw 114 are chosen such that when the lever 108 is folded down onto the top of the bar member 102, as shown in
To use the capo according to the invention, the clamp member is released as shown in
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
7279 | Ashborn | Apr 1850 | A |
390612 | Moffat | Oct 1888 | A |
692751 | Winchell | Feb 1902 | A |
1788636 | Russell | Jan 1931 | A |
3185012 | Dunlop | May 1965 | A |
4261548 | Kaderabek | Apr 1981 | A |
4671156 | Hathcock | Jun 1987 | A |
4746098 | Abarotin | May 1988 | A |
5031879 | Umlauf, Jr. | Jul 1991 | A |
5133342 | Seaton | Jul 1992 | A |
5226638 | Ausilio | Jul 1993 | A |
5284077 | Ellis | Feb 1994 | A |
5685770 | Wood, Sr. | Nov 1997 | A |
5713559 | McClarin et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
6005174 | Regen | Dec 1999 | A |
D446540 | Elliott | Aug 2001 | S |
6271448 | Steinberger | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6410832 | Sterner | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6452077 | Chapman et al. | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6459025 | D'Addario | Oct 2002 | B1 |
6528711 | Paige | Mar 2003 | B1 |
6573440 | Rodriguez | Jun 2003 | B1 |
6635813 | Campling | Oct 2003 | B2 |
6835880 | Silva | Dec 2004 | B1 |
6958439 | White | Oct 2005 | B1 |
20070175312 | Walworth | Aug 2007 | A1 |
20070187881 | Dixon | Aug 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070175312 A1 | Aug 2007 | US |