I'm an ageing guitar-player and have never owned or played a banjo before so a "banjitar" was the obvious quick and easy way to get that sound without having to start learning from scratch. I've got a couple of HB guitars and been impressed with the quality so this was the obvious choice. In fact, just going by "feel", this has the same feel to it as my Gretsch semi - like it's not going to fall apart any time soon. It arrives safely boxed with plenty of silica gel packs. There's minimal extras in the box - a hex spanner and box-wrench plus a hanging tag. The whole thing was then placed in a larger and very solid outer box along with a couple of other bits I bought at the same time and secured with extra packing. FWIW - it shipped to me in the UK without any issues taking just over a week from ordering to delivery by DHL.
It arrived today and although I have to admit I know nothing about banjos and could be missing important elements when checking, it appears to be pretty much flawless - no blemishes and the neck looks and feels great. Fret ends will be better after a bit of TLC and the frets themselves need polishing but they are really very good - better than on some guitars I bought that cost many times as much. Action is "highish" for a guitarist but no more so than most acoustic guitars - there's no fret buzz. What really surprised me is the weight - I've not weighed it on scales but it's sort of Les Paul heavy. Again, speaking as a guitarist - it feels comfortable to play seated - no weight to the fretting hand and doesn't roll around at all. The body width is not far off any electric guitar and overall, it "feels" no different to holding something like a Mexican Tele - the same weight and solidity. The neck feels entirely like a guitar - maybe more like a Gibson than a Fender - no issues at all there. Hand position when playing is going to need a bit of practice as any contact with the skin creates unwanted "noise" - but that's about me rather than this banjo. The unbranded machine heads are smooth and decent quality - the nut will benefit from lube (wound g-string "pings" - a very common problem with guitars and not a quality issue). All the inlays and binding are spot on and look great - and in case anyone asks (EytschPi42 - yes, you...) - the fret position dots are all nicely centred.
I'll need to do some homework on setting up a banjo - not sure yet if I need to adjust tensions, bridge and neck - even the idea of whipping-off the back of the instrument to adjust is alien to me - and a little bit scary. I have sussed how to adjust the tailpiece angle - the tailpiece was touching the skin, which I felt was not ideal but assume is just done for shipping. Also not sure on skin tension and feel it would have been useful if they'd included a "set-up instructions" flier - especially as this is most likely going to be bought by people like me who have little or no knowledge of banjos.
Do I recommend it - absolutely and without reservation. For £200-gbp, this is a lot of fun waiting to happen. If you're like me, you already own racks full of guitars and you still get GAS - Gear Acquisition Syndrome - buy this rather than yet another strat-clone - it's the same but different in a way that another guitar can't be.
And as an aside, I also looked at banjitars with built-in pick-ups and was seriously considering spending a fair bit more just to get that option until I had a nose online and discovered that it is incredibly easy to add your own piezo contact pickups to any banjo - and it can all be done for pennies with the parts easily bought from sites like Amazon. So if you need pickups, don't let that put you off - ten minutes work and the price of a pint and you'll be playing Smoke on the Water cajun style (confession - I plan on recording Status Quo and Oasis covers with this - just because). Having said that - if HB made this with a pick-up and pre-amp for a few pounds extra, I would have bought it - something for Thomann to look into because, again, guitarist will buy these six-stringers and we love to plug things in.