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Cleaning up coated drum heads

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Lets say you have a favorite coated drum head you want to clean up a bit. Perhaps you are flipping a kit and need that extra little detail without new heads all around. Maybe even as a collector you want some nicer looking coated batter or reso heads.

Well I had read a few threads on other forums about people painting (yes I said painting) drum heads. I had some time and a few drum heads to try so I figured why not. Results were great and only from the back of the head can you see it was ever used. Logo is gone but for me this is no biggie.

Step 1:

Clean your drum heads well. If they are coated and have some coming off a slight sanding might help. In my case I used some acetone to scrub well (warning this will remove logos). It also removed a lot of stick marks.

Step 2:

Get some Rust-Oleum textured in white.

Step 3:

Carefully in light layers begin to spray your drum head. If it is a coated head with some valleys or chips of missing coating you will want to hit those areas first to get them to the same level as the rest of the head. You might want to mask off of the other areas.

Step 4:

Success!! Now unless your heads or totally thrashed and beat to heck you should have the same results as pictured. Tonally these heads sound just about the same as when the coating was new. Obviously if you lay on the paint it will bring the tone down. Depending on your need to do this it might not matter so much.

Tips:

I found that clear heads are obviously a better starting point for this. Coated heads might need more prep work (as mentioned above) but take well to this process. Make sure you work the paint in very light coats (just dust on the first coat) or you will have runs.

Sonor SQ2 10 14 18 American Walnut
L.A. Camco 12 14 18 Moss Green
Gretsch Round Badge 12 14 18 w/snare Champagne
Gretsch Round Badge 12 14 20 w/snare Burgundy

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HhdcpleTKlI

82nd ABN DIV OEF OIF Combat Infantry Veteran
Posted on 10 years ago
#1
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Great tip! Thanks, I'm going to give that a try.

Posted on 10 years ago
#2
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airborne - If you miss the logos, you can always have a rubber stamp place make you a duplicate of whatever your favorite brand is and you can stamp the logo back on after you paint it. Strictly for anal-retentives, but if the missing logos bother you, a rubber stamp is the cheapie way to go!

John

Too many great drums to list here!

http://www.walbergandauge.com/VintageVenue.htm
Posted on 10 years ago
#3
Posts: 5550 Threads: 576
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i have great luck using white wall tire cleaner, real dose a great job...

April 2nd 1969 scarfed pink champagne holly wood and 65/66 downbeat snare, and , supra same year very minty kit old pies
66/67 downbeat with canister
Super 400 small round knob
1967 super classic obp





once the brass ceases to glitter, and the drum looses its luster, and the stage remains dark, all you have left is the timbre of family.
Posted on 10 years ago
#4
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Manny,

Great tip on the Texturized paint! I've been painting reso heads for years with flat white, not just for appearance, but also for tone. A nice thin coating of flat white on a clear or smooth white head duplicates a coated Ambassador pretty close. I especially like to give old bass reso heads a double coat of flat white. It can eliminate the need for any felt strips and still lets the head vibrate freely. Plus it looks like a brand new head. Anyone buying the repro vintage logos for their bass drum heads should consider this. How many basses have we seen with the proper Ludwig, Rogers, or Slingy logo mounted right beneath the intrusive WeatherKing logo? Here's two WeatherKings I gave the flat white treatment to. You'll never find the original Remo logo.

[Attachment: 69276]

Mike

1 attachments
-No Guru... still learning more every day-
Posted on 10 years ago
#5
Posts: 5356 Threads: 87
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Good stuff guys I'll have to give this a try. I have a couple Radio King ink stamps Creighton sent me. I tried to remove a Evans logo and LOL did not go so well. I got the logo off but the coating came off along with it. Evans must adhere the ink logo with the coating somehow cuzz it's one tough sumem***** to get off.

Glenn.

Not a guru just havin fun with some old dusty drums.
Posted on 10 years ago
#6
Posts: 6170 Threads: 255
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real good info here. thanks for sharing..

mike

Posted on 10 years ago
#7
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Yes, this does work. I painted the reso head on my Slingy bass drum, slapped one of those logo stickers on it and the drum sounds and looks great.


Thank you!
Jeff C

"Enjoy every sandwich" Warren Zevon
Posted on 10 years ago
#8
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Airborne, Thanks for the tip. I had considered this before and it's good to hear others have actually tried it with good success. How long will this method last for, let's say, a snare batter? Have you had a chance to use brushes on them? I am going to give this a try on a not so old head that lost the coating really quickly.

James

Posted on 10 years ago
#9
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James,

I am doing this because with brushes it seems to eat up the coating. I mainly play Evans and their coating seems tougher than Remo, however, with enough playing the Evans begin to fade.

I am going to throw this head (which happens to be a snare batter) on one of my snares and keep everyone posted. I plan on trying another paint also from Krylon. It's called plastic fusion and comes in all sorts of shades including a few of white.

Keep posting your results everyone! I am going to show you guys how a coated head came out soon. I have a snare to sell and I want to touch up the coated batter head.

Great tip on the ink stamp also.

Manny

Sonor SQ2 10 14 18 American Walnut
L.A. Camco 12 14 18 Moss Green
Gretsch Round Badge 12 14 18 w/snare Champagne
Gretsch Round Badge 12 14 20 w/snare Burgundy

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HhdcpleTKlI

82nd ABN DIV OEF OIF Combat Infantry Veteran
Posted on 10 years ago
#10
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