I can understand that Drum Dials, etc. can expedite the "Get me in the neighborhood" kind of tensioning.Here's the rub:I bought an Arbiter AT kit back in 1999. When I went to "show it off" at the various forums, it was met with a lot of critical remarks. The remarks about the looks were subjective, so I took those with a grain of salt. But the main technical (theoretical) criticism was that the design of the Arbiter tuning mechanism created a small dead spot near its "hinge" that couldn't be tweaked out. So, a discussion started about the importance of even tension around the perimeter of the head. My contention was that hitting the mylar with drumsticks was going to alter the evenness of the tension no matter what. IF what I'm saying has any merit to it, then a Drum Dial or any device that measures the tension on the head would also show that playing the drums will alter the tension continually. Tension it, play it, re-check it with a dial. It's like washing and waxing a tractor!Burger Kin
O-lugs, first off let me ask you did you like or not like the Arbiter kit? Just if you didn't know there is this Fellow Named Graeme Edge plays for a group called The Moody Blues and used his Arbiters to pretty good effect and had a hit or two using them! Drummers to a large degree are stuck in the stone ages if it's not what they are familiar with or not what they had growing up then It just has to be a gimmick, the tensioning devices that is being discussed here came from the printing and acetate Industry, used by both to measure tension, the acetate is plastic, which is what a drum head is, just to explain their origin OK! I am a guitar and bass player also, and by that am more open to new Ideas than most Just drummers, In fact JR Robinson Introduced me to the tension watch over 12 years ago, and I've used one ever since, your Rub seems to be you can't get your hands around the fact that after using the tension watch or drum dial, that upon playing the drum is no longer the same tension, let me state I'm a hard Hitter, ask kevin he has seen and heard me play, the drum's stay in tension for at least a day if not longer and that is due to the heads losing tension as the t-rods back down not the head stretching,and it is always one to a couple of t-rod that had back down some and after using the tension watch long enough it will bear this out you would have to beat the heads with a hammer to achieve stretching of the heads ! the tension watch is a Fantastic tool, I've stated this every post on this thread, It is a tool nothing more, it is very accurate as long as you have it calibrated correctly, and once you get the values recorded on paper or in your head, you set the tension on each drum how you like it and your ready to play all night long, with a ampeg SVT and a Marshall 100 watt super lead which is what my band mates use! which means I ain't lightly tapping on the drums! or in other words you don't have to take my word for it, But I can probably state with a high degree I've used this device longer than any of the members here that have posted to this thread, if you want to continue tuning the way you have already fine, but this device is not a gimmick and does work, torque wrenches and the like are not accurate as the tension watch, the torque drum keys etc, measure the t-rod torque which can be dirty, no lube, and bad threads which are giving false readings, the tension watch measure the true drum head tension! Oh back to the arbiter Graeme Edge states in the Classic Drummer Edition vol 9 Issue1 that arbiter is the only drum he's ever endorsed and absolutely loves His! I hope this doesn't come off as A smart Azz post?