I know this is a cocktail forum, but the inspiration for this set came directly from this board. It is made from a 20.00 floor tom, and uses a 29.00 Pulse piccolo snare. My goal is to ditch the standard HH stand in favor of an X-hat, and to attach the snare to the shell of the floor tom. As far as cymbals go, I will use the 13'' HH's and the 16'' Paragon crash. At the moment, I have my 17'' AA crash in the ride position. It is useable, but I need a couple of Moongel pads to dampen it. I will probably look for some kind of crash/ride and add a couple of smaller cymbals. Your suggestions/comments welcome!
nice work!
what heads are you using on the tom and how are you tuning it? before I built my coctail kit, I did something similar with a 16x16 tom and it was great but a challenge to tune. also, how did you go about deciding about port size and placement....and how has it improved the sound?
Tuning has been an ongoing process. Since this is not a traditional floor tom, the top head resonates every time the bottom head is struck (and it is a lot.) I guess it's what it is like if you had your head in front of a kick drum. I don't usually muffle toms, so this is something new to me. Right now, I have 3/4'' weather stripping surrounding the top head for muffling. Cutting the port holes has eliminated some of the problem. I reused the top head in the photo by cleaning it up and putting it on the bottom. I put a new Evans G2 head on the top.
I got the idea for the port holes from Keith Cronin. I couldn't find a 4'' hole saw, so I opted for cutting (2) 2 1/8 holes. I would have to say the porting really didn't change the sound that much, but lets a lot of air escape. BTW, I bought some lug locks. They really work!
cool. How do you like G2 (clear, I see) as a top head? I have a coated G2 on the top of my 24x14 and it's nice and round, though the attack is a bit softer than on a coated G1; I'd gander that the clear has good attack but has more overtones than a coated one.
WHERE DO YOU GET LUG LOCKS?? I haven't seen them for decades!