Years ago, when the Shubb Capo was relatively new on the  market, I wanted to be sure that its design was as universal as  possible, so I set out to really get precise about this. 
        At a NAMM (music trade) show I spent hours with the  manufacturers of many of the most common guitars on the market: Martin,  Taylor, Santa Cruz, Collings, Gibson, Fender, Takamine, and some others.  In most cases I was given the actual specs to which their fretboards  were made, and then double-checked  by measuring them with a contour  gauge. I spent more than two full days documenting those fretboard  radii, with all the necessary resources within a few hundred feet.
         My conclusion: we were already solidly in specs for ALL of them. Here's why: 
        • The differences between the entire range of radii used by  guitar manufacturers -- across a two inch span -- is almost  imperceptible, both to the eye and to the functioning of the capo. When I  pressed the capo against any of these fretboards, from the largest to  smallest radius, the capo's curve appeared to be perfect. And the  functioning of the capo confirmed it. 
        The chart to the right  illustrates how slight the difference is across the range of radii used  on fretboards. The same drawing of the capo's curve, compared to radii  in half inch increments, ranging all the way down to 7.25" ...for which  we do make a special model. 
        •  The resilience of the Shubb Capo's rubber material is sufficient to  adapt it to a wide range of radii or even compound radii — so much so  that at least one professional I know (John McEuen) uses only one capo  onstage (a Shubb S1 guitar capo) on all of his many instruments, some  with radius and some with flat fretboards. And he is a very discerning  musician. 
        And if we really want to look  very closely, the capo's real assignment is not resting against the  fretboard, it is resting against the tops of the strings. And the  difference in gauge from first to sixth makes that shape slightly  different from the fretboard's radius. 
        BOTTOM LINE: don't worry about it. If the fretboard radius is  anywhere from 8.5 " to 20" the model 1 (or 3) capo will work perfectly.  That may sound like a big difference, but over the 2" span of a guitar  fretboard it is virtually imperceptible. 
         ...Rick Shubb