I bought an inexpensive Sonor bop set to live in my van for jazz jams. It was the first new drum set I have purchased in 50+ years of playing. I don't know exactly what wood Sonor uses but the bearing edges were fine. I applied two coats of orange shellac to the shell interiors and I think they sound better to my ears. I also bought a set of die cast hoops (now the set is not so cheap anymore!). I use Aquarian Modern Vintage medium batter heads and Remo thin diplomat resonant heads on the snare and toms. I actually liked the sound of the Sonor bass drum batter head so I left it alone. I am in the camp that thinks heads (and tuning) and bearing edges are more important but sometimes the added shellac/varnish can make an improvement in sound.
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Should I shellac my luan shells?
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Posted on 2 years ago
#11
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Different heads can totally transform a kit.
Cobalt Blue Yamaha Recording Custom 20b-22b-8-10-12-13-15-16f-18f
Red Ripple '70's Yamaha D-20 20b-12-14f
Piano Black Yamaha Recording Custom Be-Bop kit 18b-10-14f
Snares:
Yamaha COS SDM5; Yamaha Cobalt Blue RC 5-1/2x14; Gretsch round badge WMP; 1972 Ludwig Acrolite; 1978 Ludwig Super Sensitive; Cobalt Blue one-off Montineri; Yamaha Musashi 6.5X13 Oak; cheap 3.5X13 brass piccolo
Red Ripple '70's Yamaha D-20 20b-12-14f
Piano Black Yamaha Recording Custom Be-Bop kit 18b-10-14f
Snares:
Yamaha COS SDM5; Yamaha Cobalt Blue RC 5-1/2x14; Gretsch round badge WMP; 1972 Ludwig Acrolite; 1978 Ludwig Super Sensitive; Cobalt Blue one-off Montineri; Yamaha Musashi 6.5X13 Oak; cheap 3.5X13 brass piccolo
Posted on 2 years ago
#12
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