Looking for steel picks ... again
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I likme these. And I bought them many many years ago.
http://elderly.com/accessories/items/CB1941.htm
http://elderly.com/accessories/items/CB1941.htm
- Jerry Overstreet
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Banjer picker Sammy Shelor has a line of stainless steel finger picks. I don't know how much luck you would have re-shaping them, but if so, they should last a long, long time.
Check the supply houses like first quality music, janet davis, elderly etc. for stock as they are generally sold out. I think they are just called Sammy Shelor finger picks.
Check the supply houses like first quality music, janet davis, elderly etc. for stock as they are generally sold out. I think they are just called Sammy Shelor finger picks.
- Chris Schlotzhauer
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Are those the Jeff Newman picks?Roger Francis wrote:http://www.texasmusicsupply.com/jffingerpicks.html
- David Mason
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The ACRI picks come in stainless:
http://jdmc.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen ... rt=&q=acri
They're certainly the last picks I'll buy, the band shape eliminates all the concerns about fit and comfort that other picks raise. The tips do need to be reshaped from "banjo" to "steel" shape, as do they all, IMO. Manufacturers try to be all things to all people.
http://jdmc.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen ... rt=&q=acri
They're certainly the last picks I'll buy, the band shape eliminates all the concerns about fit and comfort that other picks raise. The tips do need to be reshaped from "banjo" to "steel" shape, as do they all, IMO. Manufacturers try to be all things to all people.
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Yes Chris they are the JF picks, I've tried a lot of different picks and these stay put no matter how hard you want to pick and no issues with wear, probably not for every body but it's all I'm ever going to use
Rittenberry SD10, 2 nashville 112s with telonics speaker, behringer EPQ450 power amp, 705 pups, Telonics FP-100, live steel strings, mogami cords, wet reverb
- Elton Smith
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sorry - don't know how that posted twice
Last edited by Arty Passes on 16 Dec 2012 9:41 am, edited 3 times in total.
- Carl Mesrobian
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- David Mason
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Besides having finger bands that are twice as wide as Dunlops (three times as wide as Nationals, Kysers etc.!) the Acri picks have blades that are about 1 1/2 times the width of the Dunlops. And real long too. If long evenings of snipping away at stainless steel is where your pleasure tends, you would have a really great time with those....
The finger bands are so comfortable, it just eliminates all the rosin/eyeglass nosepad/spit/Elmer's/heatshrink goofballing entirely. No need. There are a couple of reasons I can think of that they haven't stormed the castle & put Dunlop, Kyser, and National out of business. One, brass, or steel - no nickel silver. Two, the blades are impossible to use without some basic surgery - banjo players.... They're sort of like the modern Dunlops, in that the blade sticks out straight and has a lovely spoon shape. But there's even more of it, the first thing I do is slice about 1/8" off the tips then attack them with both needlenose & roundnose jewelry pliers. Destroy the lovely spoon, flatten them out and curve them up around the fingertip more. Even if you like your picks to stick out some... umm, not that much.
Three, this "Gord Acri" fellow is apparently kind of a mountain man or something, he rides his burro into Tombstone every spring & fall for a bag of flour & gunpowder, drops off some picks at Janet Davis & Elderly Music then he's gone again... banjo players.
The finger bands are so comfortable, it just eliminates all the rosin/eyeglass nosepad/spit/Elmer's/heatshrink goofballing entirely. No need. There are a couple of reasons I can think of that they haven't stormed the castle & put Dunlop, Kyser, and National out of business. One, brass, or steel - no nickel silver. Two, the blades are impossible to use without some basic surgery - banjo players.... They're sort of like the modern Dunlops, in that the blade sticks out straight and has a lovely spoon shape. But there's even more of it, the first thing I do is slice about 1/8" off the tips then attack them with both needlenose & roundnose jewelry pliers. Destroy the lovely spoon, flatten them out and curve them up around the fingertip more. Even if you like your picks to stick out some... umm, not that much.
Three, this "Gord Acri" fellow is apparently kind of a mountain man or something, he rides his burro into Tombstone every spring & fall for a bag of flour & gunpowder, drops off some picks at Janet Davis & Elderly Music then he's gone again... banjo players.
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Looking for steel picks ......Again
Use a rod smaller than your finger, Clamp the rod in a vice and work the wings very carefully with a small hammer to fit and not hurt your fingers. Work slow and make them round not sharp bending in the holes. An old Army Engineer trick to polish metal quickly is put the polishing compound on a piece of Brown Grocery Bag. Works quickly without a lot of work, They finish with a cloth or paper towel. Good Luck and Happy Steeling.
- Jim Curtain
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- Jim Curtain
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Dunlop!
I prefer the National picks and somehow managed to buy up some several years ago. Dunlop makes a near copy of the Nationals and are shown on their websight. Tom Bradshaw may sell them. They come in several thicknesses and are very shapeable. Players have their favorites, these are mine.
- Elton Smith
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