BUILDING A STAVE SNARE DRUM, finish & sound check: The "Helmish" Snare, Pt. 4
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- Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024
- This wraps up my first custom order snare drum build. I just realized that I never told you why I've been calling it "The Helmish." If you're interested, let me know and I'll tell you the tale. Cheers, everyone! THANKS FOR WATCHING!
It looks like a free floating set up.
Looks great!
sounds good man
Wow, it sounds so good. I would have had doubts about a lugless snare since you can't tune both heads separately, but... wow
Joe, that bag and button are awesome. Isn't just so fun to put something together and have it work! The drum is a beautiful piece. Josh should be proud to have it. Good luck with more orders.
I wonder how much a Joseph Center snare will cost in the future.
I bet they will sell for multi-thousands.
Party on, JC
Dave in Brew town
Good job!!!
awesome work mate!
What type of hardware are the "Lugs" on the snare head side?
Nuts I cannibalized from some extra Ayotte hardware.
I didn't see you do the snare bed
I may have missed it, what thread size are those tension rods and cross dowels?
I don't recall what the numbers are on the threadsize. They are the standard for tension rods--at least in America.
Joseph Center thanks. I have searched all over for them in 12-24. Havent found any. I finally bought a drill tap and some aluminum rod to make my own.
Couldn't find the soundcheck ☹️ otherwise great work 😀
do you cut your snare beds by hand or with a router?
Glenn Parker By hand.
Joseph Center just with a file?
Yep, just with a file and sandpaper. I'll show it off sometime (like, as soon as I can afford to put hardware on one of those shells). It's pretty simple. It's easy to control. It takes a little bit of time, but less than building a jig to do it with a router. Maybe when I'm producing a dozen shells a week, then I'll bother making a router jig for the snare bed. :)
what saw bench do you have?
I have a crappy little table saw--not even 10-inch blade. I hope that someday I can buy a decent one.
@@JosephCenter There is worse in italy
A stave drum would be better if it were biscuited.
Sweet gum is notorious for moving a lot on you, no wonder your first shell went to hell. That being said, the cuts you make at 9:30 aren't the safest. At the very least, push the sled, not the workpiece.
Cheers!
Hey, thanks for the comment! Yeah, I learned that the hard way about sweet gum. :/ Beautiful stuff, though. As for the cuts, 2 things: (1) My general excuse is that I'm still learning. I've never had a teacher. I respect the tools, though, and approach them carefully, even if not conventionally. Also, it helps that I'm not doing anything in large batches or even the same cut more than a few at a time. (2) I'm not giving lessons, just sort of documenting my learning experience and showing off the results. Thanks for the comment! :)