Review: Thalia Capo 200

Review: Thalia Capo 200

Like
500
0
Wednesday, 25 January 2017
Accessories
This post was originally published on this site

If you’re a guitarist, you’ve probably heard your instrument go slightly out of tune every time you clamp a capo onto the fretboard.

A capo is the simple spring-loaded mechanism that raises the pitch of a guitar by pushing down on the strings wherever you place it on the neck. Capos push harder than your fingers, which will usually make your entire guitar a little sharp. And the relative thickness of the low strings means they’re pulled a little harder than the high strings, so the strings can easily go out of tune relative to each another.

People generally assume that “better,” more expensive capos degrade your intonation less than cheaper ones, but capos almost invariably mess up your tuning. Thalia makes the bold claim that its new 200 Series capos  $60 to $90, depending upon the finish) will change the pitch of your guitar without noticeably impacting the intonation. The capo does this with a unique design: a set of swappable fretpads, so you can find the one that best matches the size of your guitar’s neck and keeps the intonation drift to a minimum.

WIRED

The 200 is beautiful, which seems strange to say about a capo. I reviewed the black chrome version, which in my case also had a blue abalone inlay. It looks exceptional, and it feels well madet.

The 200 series includes a couple of “tuning kits”—two sets of removable Teflon and rubber fretpads (seven of each, 14 total) sized to fit a particular guitar neck. By using the correct fretpad, you are essentially customizing the capo to your guitar’s fretboard radius. My Seagull, for example, has a fretboard radius of 16 inches, so I needed to snap the appropriate fretpad into the capo. Simple, and the quick-start guide (a capo with a quick-start guide!) includes a chart showing which size fretpad you need for your make of guitar. If your guitar isn’t listed, Thalia offers a guide for determining your fretboard radius. If you play a 12-string, a ukulele, or a mandolin, you can buy the appropriate pads.

I started with a Teflon fretpad. Clamping it at the second fret left my guitar slightly sharper than it should have been—and I really do mean slightly. All of the strings remained in tune with one another. If I was playing solo, I wouldn’t have noticed, and I had to pull out my tuner to check. I’m not even sure I’d have noticed the change in intonation playing with other musicians.

Using the capo on my kid’s little nylon-string Woods guitar (after finding the proper fretpad through trail and error) gave the same results. And intentionally using the wrong fretpads on both guitars definitely had an adverse impact on tuning, further suggesting that Thalia’s swappable system make a measurable difference.

The 200 is also easy to put on and take off. You can quickly adjust or remove it with one hand—keep strumming, show-off!—and store it above the nut.

TIRED

Using the rubber (as opposed to Teflon) fretpads left the guitar slightly sharp as well, but it also pushed the thicker, lower strings a little further out of tune than the higher strings. Again, by slightly I do mean slightly, but the discrepancy from string to string was clearly noticeable. Even if you were playing alone, this would require a quick re-tune (unless of course you’re an indie rocker who knows being out of tune is cool, even though Pavement called it quits more than a decade ago).

Conversely, the guitar’s tone was a little more muted with the rubber fretpad compared to the noticeably bright Teflon pad. I prefer a more muted tone myself, and thought the rubber fretpad sounded better once re-tuned. But most people prefer a brighter sound, so make of it what you will.

And, of course, there’s the price. Sixty to 90 bucks is definitely a lot to pay for a capo, but the Thalia 200 does keep your guitar almost perfectly in tune, is a snap to use, and provides added flexibility with a variety of fretpad sizes. Add to that the beautiful finish and customizable inlays, and the cost begins to look much more reasonable.

RATING

8/10 – An excellent product, with room to kvetch.

Go Back to Top. Skip To: Start of Article.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Welcome to dev.jamair.tv