[IMG]http://www.vintagedrumforum.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=51803&stc=1&d=1356740704[/IMG]
My Homemade AMAti (made In Czeschlovakia) from 1980.
Cool!!
What are the sizes?
-196?-72 6ply White Oyster Amati
-1960s 3ply Red Sparkle Amati
- Zildjian, Paiste, Zyn, Istanbul
http://bandzone.cz/blueswan
Cool looking kit,something you brought back from the dead?
It looks like those shells are poplar? Looks a lot like the poplar that grows here in my neck of the woods.
Amati shells are beech, as far as I know.
-196?-72 6ply White Oyster Amati
-1960s 3ply Red Sparkle Amati
- Zildjian, Paiste, Zyn, Istanbul
http://bandzone.cz/blueswan
Cool looking kit,something you brought back from the dead?It looks like those shells are poplar? Looks a lot like the poplar that grows here in my neck of the woods.
I'm trying to figure out , where the picture of the interior of the shell is? and/or what prompted that comment.
Beechwood Shell. The thin-film coating.
I obviously don´t know about these, as I can´t see the insides - but not all Amatis are beech. The snare I had and customized a couple of years ago was definitely not beech, but something more porous - could very well be poplar.
I redid the edges, as they were very rough and poorly profiled:
[img]http://www.gratisimage.dk/thumb-ED7E_4A3FA86F.jpg[/img]
Click on the thumbnail for large version, click on the large for mega-version.
[img]http://www.gratisimage.dk/thumb-CF4B_4A3FA86F.jpg[/img]
[img]http://www.gratisimage.dk/thumb-4762_4A3FA90A.jpg[/img]
Regards
Jon
It is quite possible that Amatis exported to Western bloc were made from different wood. Export-oriented goods often greatly differed from the stuff which was available at the home market.
-196?-72 6ply White Oyster Amati
-1960s 3ply Red Sparkle Amati
- Zildjian, Paiste, Zyn, Istanbul
http://bandzone.cz/blueswan
Of the European poplars, white poplar ,usually has more grain than what your drum has but trembling aspen --populus tremulus, is fairly light in grain, more resembling European silver birch, in the grain but a little less hard. There is also black alder, as a possibility too. It can easily be mistaken for poplar. It is similar in grain and about as soft.
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