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STAR drums and it's turn to TAMA in 1974

Posts: 1432 Threads: 110
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Thanks, Jonnistix, for fixing that rare acrylic set here.

And: aren't these pics thwarting my previous wording:

'... The arrangement of the lugs is not in opposite, like I've seen it ONLY and ALWAYS at STAR ...'

Feels like your pics are laughing at me, just like saying: I was kidding ...

Teverson-sr: good idea to ask someone of the elderly workers.

But I am afraid, time has ran out ... It's too far away on the time line ...

Anyway, we're looking at a time nearly 50 years ago.

Ralf

Vintage STAR (= Pre-Tama) website: www.star-drums.de
Posted on 15 years ago
#11
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Did Tama make Zimgar drums?

Hit like you mean it!!
Posted on 15 years ago
#12
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From wayne

Did Tama make Zimgar drums?

That one is a maybe, in my mind. I am sure Ralf will know.

Ralf, I didn't even see it that way. I never actually noticed until you mentioned. Now if you look at the lugs, they are too long to fit that shell

lined up. And the Majestic ride toms are almost the same way. If you look at the tom, it does not seem so, but those line up with only about 3/4" to 1" between them. I honestly think the distributors had more options than we might give credit. Look at all those different brands, they are each set up the way their named buyer wanted. I was bidding on a set on ebay a couple of months ago that had wrap removed and from stained, they also had those teardrop lugs, the only way I knew they were Star is because the bass shell had the telltale grain.

"Ignorance may be overcome through education. Stupidity, however, is a lifelong endeavor." So, educate me, I don't likes bein' ignant...
"I enjoy restoring 60s Japanese "stencil" drums...I can actually afford them..."I rescue the worst of the old valueless drums for disadvantaged Children and gladly accept donations of parts, pieces and orphans, No cockroaches, please...
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Posted on 15 years ago
#13
Posts: 1432 Threads: 110
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'... I am sure Ralf will know.'

Thanks, jonnistix, but that's too much of honour for me. I'm also only fishing in the murky waters of the STAR-past ...

The more we discuss about STAR, the more, I guess, we come to the one conclusion: there must have been either a 'neutral' exporter in Japan or a third party importer in the USA dealing with these conglomerated drumsets, from which I've posted the badges in my article on the first page.

Hi Wayne,

If you remember, I've posted in your 'Zim Gar'-thread the following:

quote

... If you look at ebay USA, at the moment there are a 'ZimGar' drumset

and a snare drum listed. Especially the snare drum has some significant

and characteristic traits:

- it has a type of lugs, that Star never used and

- it has a type of snare strainer, that Star never used as well.

(The Star snare strainer look similar - but he definitely is not equal!)

These small differences (assuming they are original ...) make me think once

more that Zim Gar is NOT made by Star.

unquote

Sorry, but I cannot better report anything else today: Zim Gar seems not to be manufactured by STAR. (I believe that, as long as I don't see a Zim Gar drum with STAR-coincident features ...)

Ralf

Vintage STAR (= Pre-Tama) website: www.star-drums.de
Posted on 15 years ago
#14
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When I was in university I bought a set of Star's for $40 and used them a lot, and sold them for $100.

They weren't spectacular (I'm trying to be nice) but were a fun set.

They were stamped inside with circled letters. One of the drums had a stamped "K" with a circle around it, so they became known as the "Circle K" drums, named after the convenience store of the same name.

Posted on 15 years ago
#15
Posts: 2628 Threads: 40
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From Ralf

I just want to confirm what I have said concerning same and totally different hardware parts - all within one brand name, in this example it is 'Apollo'.These pics are copies from the drumarchive and from this forum. You can see clearly that the snare strainer (and the lugs) on the left are types never used by STAR. On the right side - totally in contrast - it is indeed a 'STAR' snare strainer as the logo of 'STAR' can be seen on that part and the lugs are also STAR lugs!Ralf

[COLOR="DarkRed"]Not to throw a monkey-wrench, here but....this doesn't clarify things, it confuses things.

I have had Apollo snare drums which had the lug style from the LEFT photo.

So, I do not know what that says about who made Apollo....but if you are saying that STAR never used the left pic lugs....and I am saying that Apollo DID...that leaves us no better off, eh ? Coffee Break2

[/COLOR]

From Rob G.

There was a big MIJ thread on Drumforum.org I believe and the topic of Apollo came up. I think the consensus was they had drums from both Star (such as the Sonor style lugs and the "Worlds Finest Drums" badges) and Pearl. I've long been suspicious that there was a third company as well because there are drums out there that exhibit features exclusively associated with either Star or Pearl but not both.

[COLOR="DarkRed"]My observation lends credence to this theory...Apollo was mfr'd by both companies at one time or another....[/COLOR]

From wayne

Did Tama make Zimgar drums?

[COLOR="DarkRed"]I would concur w/ Ralf...and say, based solely on aesthetic features...that ZimGars more closely dovetail with early Pearl-made drums than Star-made drums....

Except (aaaargh !!!!!!)

.....the lugs pictured in Ralf's reply #7 on this thread....do appear on early ZimGar drums...I have seen 'em, I have taken 'em apart...they were those very lugs....[/COLOR]

www.2ndending.com
Posted on 15 years ago
#16
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Here's the DFO thread that might be of interest: http://www.drumforum.org/index.php?/topic/12820-sorting-the-stencils-project/page__hl__apollo__fromsearch__1

Also, I was wondering about shells. I have a no re-ring gray painted shell which I'm pretty sure is Star. Then I have a thin re-ring kit which I'm 99% sure is Pearl, though the tom mount is nothing like theirs. OK, so far, so good. Then I have another drum, thin shell with rings, but looks like a Star to me. Sooooo, was there a type of shell Star favored?

Posted on 15 years ago
#17
Posts: 1432 Threads: 110
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Great, Rob!

I definitely will enter that forum as I can't see the pics as a visitor.

Concerning the shells: the early STARS seemed to be of cheap Luan or Mahogany. My two (and late) STAR kits from the early 70s do have the thick maple sheels with the reinforcing/ reinforcement rings, like mentioned in the DFO. Really very heavy weights.

I think STAR switched to quality shells as they wanted to get rid of the image for cheap drums: in the late 60s. And then they launched an economical series with the 'Swing Star' series, still under the brand name STAR (with the horizontal 'S' and 'Swing Star' badge).

Ralf

Vintage STAR (= Pre-Tama) website: www.star-drums.de
Posted on 15 years ago
#18
Posts: 1432 Threads: 110
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Oooops, I forgot 'DrumMate' ...

That series was made by STAR as well. Similar cheap features like SwingStar (plastic bass drum hoops, 6 lugs only at the bass drum, 'slip in' tom brackets and no tom dampers). I don't know what the real marketing strategy was behind that line.

DrumMate: 'World's Supreme Quality - Made in Japan'.

Ralf

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Vintage STAR (= Pre-Tama) website: www.star-drums.de
Posted on 15 years ago
#19
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OK, my little blue sparkle kit has to be Star. Gray painted interiors, those kind of upsidedown U shaped tom brackets, the 6 lug bass drum with plastic hoops. Want more proof? This bass drum came to me missing a lug and guess what worked perfectly as a replacement? A modern Imperialstar lug! Looks a little different, but the holes are a perfect match. Nothing else I found worked.

Posted on 15 years ago
#20
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