It is not bad for the guitar, but the capo will be kind of useless as it won't be fretting the strings properly.
you can either put the capo on the 10th fret, or tune the guitar to drop d
Yes you can. So long as the capo will physically fit on the neck.
The capo needs to go in 3rd fret to get the key of C.
It changes a the tuning of the guitar. for instance if you put a capo on the first fret all strings are then tuned 1/2 step higher. ie.. your E string becomes an F. Your A string becomes an A# and so on. But doing this also moves all your frets higher as well. Where ever you put the capo becomes the nut and the fret after it would be the first fret. Hope I didn't confuse you. No you didn't u explained it supper dupper well! -------------------- You can also use a guitar capo for alternate tunings. For example, simply put a capo on the second fret covering all stings except the low E. you made your own "Drop E" style, without even changing the tuning of the guitar.
Guitar capo is a guitar in a high octave ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- AH-no. A capo is a device that attaches to the neck and bars all the strings. The advantage here is the ability to move the capo up and down the neck. There are real fancy ones that allow you to create a chord, not sure what you'd do with it though.
it would be on the 3rd fret. i think.
An A. That would move the guitar 2 half steps or one whole step and yes making that an A
You put the capo on the 5th fret. Root note is on the low and High E string. Starting from the open neck E, F, Fs, G, Gs, A at the fifth
Put the capo on the second fret and use the "C" chord configuration - this is equivalent to a "D" with no capo.
If you have a capo you can put it on the first fret and play a G chord, or you can play a bar chord on the 4th fret (4-6-6-5-4-4)
Not your answer
Leaving the capo on the guitar for an extended period of time can cause the strings to go out of tune and may put unnecessary strain on the neck of the guitar. It is generally recommended to remove the capo when not in use to maintain the guitar's condition.