The two accordions in the pictures are different.I've seen it referred to as Do2 or D-Griff (unsure on the reasoning of that name). Apparently popular in parts of Belgium. I think a search for Do2 will pop up some results here. In line with what Kimric said, it is a B-griff layout shifted by one row. There are 6 possible layouts for a CBA keyboard arranged by minor thirds in the rows. Those we call B and C-griff are the most popular, but at least a few of the 4 other layouts have been implemented.
Oh my, I hadn't noticed. Maybe the owner shifted the button caps in rows 1 and 4 for aesthetics?The two accordions in the pictures are different.
The one on the right is Do2.
The one on the left just doesn't make sense to me.
It is the one to the left that is the problem. Never seen it before. Maybe he has moved the buttons, mut I do not think soThe two accordions in the pictures are different.
The one on the right is Do2.
The one on the left just doesn't make sense to me.
That's not an "odd duck" but a standard C-system accordion.well here is another odd duck