#1
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Outdoor Ukeleles
Need an acoustic instrument that can survive being kept in a hot car this summer. I have never played a ukelele, and would like to hear from guitar to uke players.
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#2
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A uke is a real instrument, made of wood and not built to be subjected to crazy temperature extremes. The concept doesn't work for me, sorry.
Maybe there are plastic/tech material ones that would suit your purpose. |
#3
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This outdoor uke is perfect for leaving on the dashboard of a closed car in the summer sun.
https://reverb.com/item/1461038-c-f-...ard-shell-case Last edited by Tico; 05-22-2017 at 08:13 PM. |
#4
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Take a look at the Outdoor Ukelele website.
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#5
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You should tell the OP about this. |
#6
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__________________
Fred |
#7
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How about a carbon fiber one?
I think there's others but I know blackbird has a nice one https://www.blackbirdguitar.com/prod...oncert-ukulele Not cheap but they sound great and would do ok in a car year round |
#8
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+1 for the Blackbird. If you really want something that'll survive the heat of a car on a sunny day, that's your best bet.
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#9
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It will survive in the trunk, but I still would not subject a really nice Blackbird carbon fiber or eKoa ukulele to summer car temps. The only thing that *might* survive is a solid body electric ukulele.
To the OP, please don't do this to an instrument of any real quality. The Kala Waterman and the Outdoor Ukulele are likely made of polystyrene. I cannot easily look up the melting point right now, but I would not bet on survival -- except as a misshapen blob. |
#10
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If you want to stay with guitar tuning, get a baritone as it is DGBE tuning and super easy for a guit player to move to.
The Makala (Kala's cheap line) is $85 and all plywood. A gig bag is another$20. If it fries you won't be out much. There are some for $40 but get very mixed reviews. For sure if you can handle that crazy reentrant tuning, a plastic soprano or tenor can be had cheap. Mim's ukes and Southcoast set up everything they sell, as do most reputable uke shops. |
#11
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Quote:
The website says "sold out" on every model. I'll give the benefit of doubt and assume that as a 2-person operation they are in way over their heads on manufacturing and are actually still in business. One of the Tenors is tempting though, and being polycarb I would not have to humidify.
__________________
Larrivee OM-03RE; O-01 Martin D-35; Guild F-212; Tacoma Roadking Breedlove American Series C20/SR Rainsong SFTA-FLE; WS3000; CH-PA Taylor GA3-12, Guild F-212 https://markhorning.bandcamp.com/music Last edited by AZLiberty; 05-23-2017 at 01:06 AM. |
#12
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Sorry didnīt see the last posts when posting. Polycarb seems a good alternative. |
#13
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Hey OP,
I wanted a Uke for a similar purpose (to take camping and leave in my tent) and I went with the Kala KA-C Soprano Uke. Mine played well straight from amazon and sounds pretty decent. $105 Shipped from Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Kala-KA-C-Mah...A3C1OYEM4FMOSU In your position, I would ignore most of the snobby replies about how "the concept doesn't work" and blah blah. Of course it does. Is it smart to leave a solid wood instrument in the car? Of course not. Would a carbon fiber instrument do this job the best? Probably. But a little laminate uke will do the job just fine. Lots and lots of people do exactly this |
#14
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Thanks, AZ. I was not in a position to do the research when I posted from a phone. I agree that polycarbonate would likely survive intact.
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#15
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Quote:
__________________
Too Many, Not Enough, all I can think is MORE! |