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Duco Deems meets the airbrush

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After much work, I'm finally ready to show off my 1959 WFL Barrett Deems in Black/Gold Duco.

In the first couple of photos, you'll see why I never posted a picture of it on here before.

There was rust, stickers, major pieces of the finish flaked off.

I shined up the metal as best I could, touched up the large bare spots with a brush, touched up the wobbly bearing edges and played her for the better part of a year while working up the courage to strip the finish and redo it.

Rather than "rattle can" the gold stripe as has been done by others on the forum to lovely effect, I decided to do it with an airbrush instead. The big hitch in this plan was that I had never touched an airbrush before in my life. Also, the Deems was my only wooden snare, so it was in pretty tight playing rotation.

Couple of months ago I picked up my Slingerland Student Model Radio King, so I could pull the Deems out of rotation for deep refurb.

Upon close examination of the fade and overspray, the gold paint was originally laid down on top of the black base coat, so I decided to do it that way.

The black base on my drum is about 5 coats of Rustoleum lacquer, wet sanded between coats. After the last coat went on, I let the drum sit for a couple of weeks, allowing the paint to cure. For the gold strip, I just used Testors airbrush paint from Michael's, with a medium tip in my Paasche brush.

I'm quite happy with the results. After the gold dried, I went over the drum with auto detailing clay, which resulted in a glassy smooth finish. I may clear coat it after letting it all cure for a few weeks or months.

How does she sound? The Student Model Radio King is sweet and sensitive, with a wide dynamic range. The Deems now cracks like an M1 carbine.

-Erik
______
Early '70's Slingerland New Rock #50 in blue agate (20-16-13-12)
Late '50's WFL Swingster/Barrett Deems in black/gold Duco
'70's Slingerland Gene Krupa Sound King COB
early '70's Ludwig Acrolite
'80's Ludwig Rocker II 6 1/2" snare
Rogers Supreme Big "R" hi hat

Posted on 9 years ago
#1
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It turned out very nice indeed.

Your drummers not much good is he!? What you need is someone that's as good as me. ! John Henry Bonham !!
Posted on 9 years ago
#2
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Congratulations...looks great.

Gary G.
1963 Ludwig Gold Sparkle Hollywood Kit
Ludwig Collection: 10 Vintage Snare Drums, 4 Customized Vintage Snare Drums, 4 Vintage Foot Pedals, 1 Single Value Bugle
Posted on 9 years ago
#3
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Beautiful job, one of the best duco redo's Ive seen on this forum by far. I always wondered how those clay bars worked, sounds like they do. I wish you could come over here and teach me how to use my airbrush!

Nice job!


Thank you!
Jeff C

"Enjoy every sandwich" Warren Zevon
Posted on 9 years ago
#4
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From Starship Krupa

After much work, I'm finally ready to show off my 1959 WFL Barrett Deems in Black/Gold Duco.In the first couple of photos, you'll see why I never posted a picture of it on here before:As you can see, there was rust, stickers, major pieces of the finish flaked off.I shined up the metal as best I could, touched up the large bare spots with a brush, touched up the wobbly bearing edges and played her for the better part of a year while working up the courage to strip the finish and redo it.Rather than "rattle can" the gold stripe as has been done by others on the forum to lovely effect, I decided to do it with an airbrush instead. The big hitch in this plan was that I had never touched an airbrush before in my life. Also, the Deems was my only wooden snare, so it was in pretty tight playing rotation.Couple of months ago I picked up my Slingerland Student Model Radio King, so I could pull the Deems out of rotation for deep refurb.Upon close examination of the fade and overspray, the gold paint was originally laid down on top of the black base coat, so I decided to do it that way.The black base on my drum is about 5 coats of Rustoleum lacquer, wet sanded between coats. After the last coat went on, I let the drum sit for a couple of weeks, allowing the paint to cure. For the gold strip, I just used Testors airbrush paint from Michael's, with a medium tip in my Paasche brush.I'm quite happy with the results. After the gold dried, I went over the drum with auto detailing clay, which resulted in a glassy smooth finish. I may clear coat it after letting it all cure for a few weeks or months.How does she sound? The Student Model Radio King is sweet and sensitive, with a wide dynamic range. The Deems now cracks like an M1 carbine.

Erik!

You know I love ya!.. figuratively speaking of course .. but... can you PLEASE put your pics up as ATTACHMENTS! The pics in this thread are inserted in the text box, and so large that they are blowing the thread off the page, which make navigation difficult, not to mention some other things having to do with bandwith/space. I have to remove these... but, can you put 'em back up as attachments? You will probably have to size 'em first as the files were so stinking large. We, the management, THANK YOU for your understanding!

Tommyp

Posted on 9 years ago
#5
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Thanks for the props!

jc: the "secret" to the airbrush was practice. After I read some stuff about how the mechanicals of the tool worked (so I wouldn't screw the thing up by clogging it with paint, etc.), I practiced on non-critical items like paper, scrap lumber, and my '90's "Speedfire 1000" Pearl-esque stencil kit. That one's going to be all black/gold Duco when I'm done with it.

Working with a double action airbrush is like working with a spray gun or can, except you have precise control over how much paint comes out. Pressing the button on top starts the air, and pulling it back starts the paint flow.

I'm unlikely to ever get to the point where I can do technical illustrations or Barbarian Chevy Vans because I don't really have the desire. I wanted to learn to operate the airbrush in order to do restoration stuff like this. The tool itself was a $20 yard sale score.

-Erik
______
Early '70's Slingerland New Rock #50 in blue agate (20-16-13-12)
Late '50's WFL Swingster/Barrett Deems in black/gold Duco
'70's Slingerland Gene Krupa Sound King COB
early '70's Ludwig Acrolite
'80's Ludwig Rocker II 6 1/2" snare
Rogers Supreme Big "R" hi hat

Posted on 9 years ago
#6
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Tommy,

Apologies. I figured out how to do the attachment thing when I posted to the Gallery, so I will apply that to this post.

Is there a way to make the thumbnails show up embedded in the text rather than lined up at the bottom?

-Erik
______
Early '70's Slingerland New Rock #50 in blue agate (20-16-13-12)
Late '50's WFL Swingster/Barrett Deems in black/gold Duco
'70's Slingerland Gene Krupa Sound King COB
early '70's Ludwig Acrolite
'80's Ludwig Rocker II 6 1/2" snare
Rogers Supreme Big "R" hi hat

Posted on 9 years ago
#7
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From Starship Krupa

Tommy,Apologies. I figured out how to do the attachment thing when I posted to the Gallery, so I will apply that to this post.Is there a way to make the thumbnails show up embedded in the text rather than lined up at the bottom?

Erik!

First... THANKS!!! Attachments all line up at the bottom as that is just the default that our software uses, however!... you CAN insert pics within the text box as long as they fit within the box. Guys have done that here for a while and we have no issue with it. I would suspect that you might still have to size the files to do that, but it could be done. If that is a PITA... attachments are the way, and no problem with them as one just clicks on 'em and they blow up to proper size. THANKS again for your understanding Erik!

Tommyp

Posted on 9 years ago
#8
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Erik -

The drum looks just killer. Great job !

Posted on 9 years ago
#9
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Outstanding work! The drum looks new.

Mitch

Posted on 9 years ago
#10
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