...hard to tune and their rims mount and hanging floor toms really suck, they flop around like a fish pout of water.
I find them quite easy to tune. It's really hard to slap heads on them and have them NOT be in tune, actually. It's all in the bearing edges. But, that's mostly for rock tuning.
They have innovated the hardware scene with their RIMS-style mounts that fit around the lug casings themselves. You can have the wonderful fully-resonant sound of a suspension mount without having to mess with putting it back on the tension rods when changing heads on a drum. The floppiness lets you know that the drum is unencumbered and allowed to fully resonate to allow for a more woody tone, unlike traditional mounts that attach straight to the shell which stifle the shell vibration, usually right in the center of the shell where the most resonance occurs. But, that's just my opinion gathered from my own experience gained from experimentation...
OH i also think their lugs are just fugly... :)
Yeah, Camcos are pretty fugly...
I finally found that these thin shells sound really good, once finished and properly tuned. All of the modern, thick ply shells don't.....:2Cents:
My DWs (3/16" thick shells) resonate more than my vintage Ludwigs (1/4" thick shells), but I attribute this more to the bearing edges than the shell thickness. The thinner shell is just able to move more freely and therefore "color" the sound more with woodiness.
...all of that said, I still prefer the sound of my vintage Ludwigs to my DWs for most gigs--but the recording engineers I work with still want the DW sound. Who knows if they've been exposed to the hype or if there's some quality to the sound that I'm just not hearing myself.