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Puresound Equalizer Snare Wires

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I posted a response on the Vintage Drums section but, later thought this might be more appropriate. Following John Purdie Shuffle's lead, I decided to install a set of Puresound Equalizer snares onto my Supra. What a "snappy" clean, no buzzing sound! I still like my Ludwig snare wires but, these are different . Both can be appreciated. Both are excellent in a different way. I like to experiment. I was just wondering what you guys thought of the Puresounds. Pros? Cons? Experiences? Thanks very much.

Brian

Just a drummer who loves all things about vintage drums! Nothing more, nothing less.
Posted on 8 years ago
#1
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Brian I've used them since they first came out, they are the easiest snare wires to tune a drum. I use them only on certain drums and for that sound these wires produce.

Your drummers not much good is he!? What you need is someone that's as good as me. ! John Henry Bonham !!
Posted on 8 years ago
#2
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From vintagemore2000

Brian I've used them since they first came out, they are the easiest snare wires to tune a drum. I use them only on certain drums and for that sound these wires produce.

Which ones do you like them on Mark?

Cheers!

Curtis

Posted on 8 years ago
#3
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From ec_curtis

Which ones do you like them on Mark?Cheers!Curtis

Eric on Ludwig Black galaxy acrolites.

Your drummers not much good is he!? What you need is someone that's as good as me. ! John Henry Bonham !!
Posted on 8 years ago
#4
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I was getting a lot of sympathetic buzzing that I couldn't tune-out of the drum on my hammered bronze Luddy supra. The second I added the split snares the problem went away. I wouldn't use them on all drums, but my bronze supra definitely benefited from them.

John

Too many great drums to list here!

http://www.walbergandauge.com/VintageVenue.htm
Posted on 8 years ago
#5
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I've had excellent results with the majority of Puresound wires...Vintage, Blasters, Equalizer, etc. Always fun to experiment, even though it can get pricey! I have a set of Puresound wires for my Dynasonic, but have yet to use them as my original wires for my 1966 are still in excellent condition.

Here are some pictures of a beautiful Yamaha snare drum I had. Wish I would have kept it for my drum room! The shell was cut down from a 10x14 rack tom. I experimented with many different head and snare wire combinations. The picture showing the Ludwig snare-side head and good generic chrome-plate wires gave a very SNAREY sound that drove me crazy. The last picture shows the combination I settled on...and sounded fantastic for this particular 4.5x14 snare drum...Evans Genera Dry batter, 300 Hazy snare-side and Puresound Equalizer wires. The Equalizers aren't for every drum, but was ideal for this build.

-Mark

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Posted on 8 years ago
#6
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I have Equalizer wires on a wood Slingerland snare. Elimination of sympathetic buzz is as advertised.

Al

9x Slingerland New Rock 50N 12-13-16-22 with 170 (Super S-O-M) holder
• 1979 Oak
• 1978 Blakrome + 6.5x14 TDR SD
• 1977 Black Diamond Pearl + 5x14 SD (gold badge, Rapid strainer)
• 1976 Black Cordova
• 1975 Silver Sparkle + 5x14 SD (Rapid strainer)
• 1974 Chrome + 5x14 COB TDR and 6.5x14 COW Zoomatic SDs
• 1973 Purple Sparkle
• 1973 Phantom (clear)
• 1971 Walnut (gold badges) + 5x14 TDR SD
1x Rogers Powertone Londoner V 12-13-16-22
• 1972 Butcher Block + 1979 big R Dynasonic SD
Posted on 8 years ago
#7
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>I have Equalizer wires on a wood Slingerland snare...

Good to know. Thanks Al.

Creighton

Nothing special here but I like them.
Posted on 8 years ago
#8
Posts: 545 Threads: 67
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On some of drums they deaden the sound a bit. My guess is that this is because of narrow snare beds. I build a nice 14 x 4,5 out of a vintage pearl 14 x 10 marcher and, with the idea of using the equalizers, gave it extra wide snare bed (but not so deep). Effect: a really nice and dirty crack!!! Really awesome. Little snare-buzz. Just great.

Anyone anything to say about the hypothesis that they work best on wide snare beds?

Vintage and custom drum projects:
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php...2305272732%3A6
Posted on 8 years ago
#9
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