That was my implied point. In some situations, one would not have the ideal instrument available, but would have to make what is available work as well as possible. Otherwise, owning 20 or 30 snares would do the trick, just as owning a motor pool of vehicles would cover every driving need precisely.I'd opt for the Supra, too. Sounds good live and in the studio. Maybe a 5" and a 6.5" to help cover all bases. By the way, the 5" Supra is the most recorded snare worldwide. There are many varied tones recorded over the years with this drum and in my opinion is one of the most playable, easiest to tune and maintain snares.
Understood.
Even in a perfect world, there really is no need for a lot of different snare drums -other than collectibility. A working snare drum should sound good tuned low or high. It should respond well. From there, it's a matter of heads, muffling, sticks and technique. If one chooses to use a fancy drumhead and a pair of aluminum sticks, near the edge of the drumhead it's going to sound completely different from the very same drum equipped with an Ambassador and played with a pair of RegalTip 2Bs played dead-center...and so on and so on...
So, in the case of snare drums, whatever nuance that may be present, in one instance, is and should be changeable in a different setting/application -and not just be a one-trick pony drum. Field drums and stuff like that might be the exceptions.
Most of the people I know who have collections of snare drums, still like to play on just a few particular ones -and, yes, usually they are Supras or Acrolites!x-mas1