Will try and send you a pic of the Tama holder but I can tell you now it is four holes into the bass drum shell and the hole in the bass drum needs to be about an inch or more wide for it to have been the type I have - I think Ludwig's mid-70s bull's horn system had pretty much identical holes. If you've got three holes in the bass drum then it could originally have been a Camco mount which I also have one of. But I only have a single tom holder (and it doesn't adapt to two).
As for the project Oaklawn kit which, for those who haven't followed, was just shells in 8" x 12", 14" x 14" and 12" (yes 12") x 20". Astoundlingly I've managed to get all the lugs though I've had to compromise with DW bass drum lugs and DW t-rods (finding all these was astounding enough on it's own). The latter will end up on my Camco Chanute bass drum (actually they got put on last night) and the others will move to the little Oaklawn jazz kit. No original rims at all (not even on the bass drum) so it's going to be hopefully a top class restoration/player but no more than that.
The toughest thing has been finding original (and period accurate) nitro-cellulose in Sweden (or continental Europe for that matter) because these drums were originally lacquered and have the clear lacquered inners to prove it.
Have thought many times about getting them wrapped (which I would kind of prefer) but it would take them one step further away from "factory" and my little purist soul has a problem with this.
I can't take them back to the original maple (which was my original intention) due to the earlier dark brown (ebony?) lacquer but it is apparently impossible to get coloured cellulose lacquer anymore over here and equally impossible to move it from country to country because of flammability issues. You can just get the clear stuff.
I've even comtemplated getting them "re-wrapped" in maple veneer but this seems to be prohibitively expensive or so precise that I dare not take it on myself.
So looks like I am going to have to stain the shells instead and then have them clear lacquered on top. I am aiming for a piano black kind of vibe so I hope to hell this will work. I've just found a furniture maker who is also a drummer who can do this (spray guns and such are beyond my scope), so unless anyone has an astoundingly creative solution to my problem, this will be happening shortly after Easter.
Will try and post pix of the newly restored and partially re-lacquered Chanute kit shortly.
David