All threads are metric, yes.
I don´t know about drums - but on bikes I am pretty sure chrome took over from nickel as polished plating shortly after the Korean war - mid-fifties.
Jon
All threads are metric, yes.
I don´t know about drums - but on bikes I am pretty sure chrome took over from nickel as polished plating shortly after the Korean war - mid-fifties.
Jon
That would be similar to drums, where by the late 50's , nickel was offered as an option. Some drummers ,who had always had nickel , preferred it but ,certainly it was almost non-existent by the early 60's.------just a thought to help date your drum.
I don´t know about drums - but on bikes I am pretty sure chrome took over from nickel as polished plating shortly after the Korean war - mid-fifties.
M-mm... bicycles also is not a very good example here, Jon. :)
I have some old bikes ---- f.e., a pre-war Russian-American bike (Dux) - it has nickel covered details, and two german - one of them is chromed (Wanderer) and another one is nickeled (Diamant)... Moreover, the original german set of bike's tool-keys has inches sizes but all of parts have the metric thread of course...
So, suppositions are continued..
Well, to snare --- it seems to me also that will be a correct to suppose about a lot of small italian makers.
George.
If you mean the #925 strainer, of course they share the principle, but I think there are many, many differencies. I have put both into one picture here:http://www.gratisimage.dk/image-7946_4F82DFF5.jpg[COLOR="Navy"][COLOR="Navy"][Sorry to shoot that down, but I don´t think it is a Star. Good eye, Jon...I did not look close enough to get the subtle differences.[/COLOR][COLOR="Red"][COLOR="Red"]By the way, have you ever seen a woodshelled Star with 10 lugs?[/COLOR] Well, yes. It was a Pearl. I cannot recall the stencil badge name, but a sweet sounding snare it was. Precision made, 6 ply shell, 10 heavy lugs, quite uncharacteristic of Pearl, but cast with their name inside.[/COLOR]RegardsJon
Mind Blowi Coffee Break2
OK.
I have only seen japanese 10-luggers in steel - and almost all from the midseventies and newer.
Jon
Found this thread on the Pearl Drummer's Forum. Seems to be a similar snare. The owner ,from Lithuania, claims it is Trowa http://www.pearldrummersforum.com/showthread.php?264073-my-first-vintage-score
Thanks!
Yes, the lugs looks very much the same, unlike the hoops and the strainer.
Interesting.
Jon
May be a W&A drum. They seemed to use a random assortment of shells, rims, lugs etc and they used 5 sided lugs.
Just a thought.
Found this thread on the Pearl Drummer's Forum. Seems to be a similar snare. The owner ,from Lithuania, claims it is Trowa http://www.pearldrummersforum.com/showthread.php?264073-my-first-vintage-score
I also have read that theme - funny and sad to read, owner knows nothing about his things, nothin knows in geografy... And other PDF guys say "Wow!"... No comments...
Hey !
It's polish snare drum POLMUZ made in Warsaw. Probably from 50-ies.
Here is fanpage : https://www.facebook.com/Polmuz.
http://olx.pl/oferta/werbel-polmuz-ladny-drewno-14-cali-okleina-CID751-ID68Oup.html#8ebdb9dfb4
Are you sure you want to delete this post?
Are you sure you want to report this thread?