It doesn't happen all that often in the drum business, I realise. But I give a glaring example in guitars: the $25K Eddie Van Halen Frankenstein. Reflectors are wrong, the blue paint are two glaring examples of the inaccuracies. Fender blended a few eras of the Frankenstein together, it seems. I haven't built a Frankenstein, myself...
I see few re-issue drum kits, but have never been satisfied with what I have seen. For some reason, they never try to have the hardware period-correct. They look like the old kit from ten feet away.
Has anyone here painstakingly tried to make a replica of their drum hero's kit? Would you try to make a replica with the correct shells and hardware, or would you do it with just the correct hardware and the incorrect shells? Would you sacrifice vintage values just to get you hero's kit right, or would you do something that evokes the spirit of the kit?
I wish more manufacturers would do what Nissan did with vintage 280z's- they rounded up some restorable examples and literally remanufactured them!!! They were better than what many people could have done themselves, and they had a factory warranty, to boot!!!