A little late to the game, but you all have been asking, so here it is finally! The Snare Used: amzn.to/2AhHWI1 The giveaway winners will be announced at the end of this week. There is still time to enter! ruclips.net/video/3WUrhf6V1vw/видео.html
I'm a guitarist as well and it sounds horrible to me lol, I was just about to post a comment about how it sounds terrible but decided to reply onto yours instead. lifeless sounding snare. No inspiration what so ever.
90% of an audience, especially live would never know the difference between a $2600 snare and a $70 snare (new heads and upgrades). Drummers get all hung up an this stuff. Studio, different story...
oh how true......in early 80's I bought a Lud #400 .....looking for the Zep sound.....silly me @ 15 y/o....My 5" sensitone I bought @ pawnshop for $40 sounds great w/a Carvin CM68 on it
This is 100% the issue I have with a lot of other musicians. You're making a song for the listener. They don't care if your instrument is made of maple or partially burned pallet wood with nails sticking out of it. Besides which, most people listen on laptops and telephones, with the best option being really shitty headphones.
In 9th grade my parents bought me a Tama Super Mahogany set with a metal Swingstar snare. Evens blue heads on the bass and toms and they sound AMAZING. The snare? My band teacher at the time did the cut an old head bead off and middle out, placing under the batter head and BOOM!! Meaty sound and EVERY one that hears it tells me, "That snare sounds amazing." And it does. It sounds beefy and full and despite being "cheap" it's great! Just because it costs an arm doesn't mean it's worth it.
Derek Charette where your videos at? At least the man's doing something. And you don't have to hit hard if your drums sound good (his do). Much more room for dynamics if you play lower overall... But none of this matters because it's just a RUclips video. Don't be a douche. Just watch a different video.
Great video, man! I have a cheap kit that my students use during our lessons. I knew they were going to beat the heck out of any kit they use, and I figured it'd be a waste to get a more expensive kit if it was going to be trash in a couple years. So, all of the mods and maintenance tricks you suggest have been a big help in making my student-kit last longer and sound waaaaay better. =)
Only if the school has a jazz or concert band, otherwise, they only need marching snares. Our school had a closet of a half dozen set snares that were donations, but we never used them...
You have the PERFECT drum sound for my taste! But honestly once you tuned the drum it sounded just fine to me, even without the other improvements you made.
A good snare drum sound is the essence of a good music production. I love the devotion you put into your strive for perfection. The end result is very convincing!
Man thanks for doing this experiment, all the techniques you are demonstrating are actually very helpful for people who wants to enhance the sound quality of the drums they get from budget drumsets!!! very cool!
a pro tip for cheap snare ... use the cheapest acoustic foam and place around the inner wall of the snare drum, that will kill the sound a bit but it compensates by adjusting the tension ... it definitely improves the sound.
Dave, I think you should cut the snare to like 4-3 inches and add some jingles to it to try and make a jungle snare. I think it would be pretty cool and original.
A fun and interesting little project. If you are like me, a drum junkie, than it makes perfect sense. I confess, I did almost exactly the same things you did. I tried something a little different with the springs in the cheap old style Pearl lug knock offs. I used spray -in foam insulation. Spray for like a nano second or you end up with a blob of foam you have to use a razor knife to sculpt the lug back into being. But it works. As for what to do with it, I ended up doing three of them, one in each of the finishes they were selling them in on ebay at the time..and gave them to a local Catholic elementary school band so kids who's folks couldn't afford to buy stuff like that would have something to learn on. (I'm not Catholic, but they aren't rich. So we're even... : ) Thanks for posting this. It's a fun watch.
I used Tung Oil on my 7 piece Mapex Venus Series kit.. it started out as a 5 piece (22x16, 12x9, 13x11, 16x16, and came with a 14x5.5 snare for $140) all made from basswood. I live in Florida and while it was stored inside a guys house I still felt the need to treat the inside of the shells. I then ran across 2 more toms (8x8 and 10x8 for $40) which I purchased from the same guy who sold me the 5 piece kit. Sad thing is he lived almost 2 hours away and could of just sold me the 2 extra toms last time I got the 5 piece. But thanks to your videos Im now a craigslist watcher lol. I took off the old wrap and used some self adhesive wrap from Amazon. I purchased all new heads and even went as far as to get another snare (Mapex MPX 14x8 maple snare) all of my toms and bass drum heads are Evans... I got the EC2 batters with EC reso heads. My bass drum has the EMAD2 with the bigger muffling ring. But for my new snare i purchased the Remo reverse controlled dot batter and the Ambassador clear snare side heads. Even though Mapex put Remo's coated UV batter with a remo clear UV reso... but after swapping the heads i got the full snare sound. My question though is what would you suggest for dampening? Ive tried that moon gel but it seems to do nothing. While restoring the kit (i turned the bass drum into a virgin bass by filling the tom mounting holes with wood pudy.) Then I used wood bondo for the dents and dings on the bass (i tried to skip that process but once i started putting the new wrap on you could see where the dents were.) Your channel has encouraged me to continue fixing up my kit and after a month of sanding, patching, sanding, using tung oil, and some more sanding... my kit was complete. I only used 2 coats of Tung Oil on the inside of each tom and the bass drum. I left the snare drums alone but after seeing this I may try a coat on the original snare that came with the kit. I dont want to mess up my maple snare. Now that Ive got a 7 piece drum kit that I repaired (mostly cutting out rubber grommets from a sheet of rubber i purchased from amazon) and having spent hundreds on 2 double tom mounts w/ an accessory clamp for cymbals (currently i have 6 cymbals). Im looking for a decent 3 or 4 piece kit. Any suggestions? After wrapping this last kit im not entirely worried about the wrap or how ugly it looks. I mainly check the inside of the shells for rust or corrosion on the screws/washers. Also i look for damage done to the wooden shells. My next set will use Remo coated heads as I see most kits with awesome tom tones have those Remo coated heads. But Im sure the type of wood the drum kit is made of makes a huge difference as well. Thus why Im writing you a book on your old post lol but Ive got a few friends who want to play reggaeton type music and I feel my Basswood mapex Venus series isnt really tuned or styled to play that type of music. The pitch that my drums are tuned too is geared more towards progressive rock. Any suggestions or tips would be greatly appreciated. But again thank you for posting a the videos you do about purchasing cheap equipment and making it sound good. Long live the bearded drummer!!! Lol
I think what you did to the snare was great, and you got a decent sound out of it! I have been a drummer for many years, and if nothing else, you have shown younger drummers techniques they can use on other drums, and different ways to get a better sound. Keep up the good work, some time in the future that snare could save the day, and impress a trained ear!
I bought this snare a year ago. I took the top head off and coated the interior with Elmer's Wood Stabilizer, sanded and waxed the rim, then put on a decent top head. I suck at drumming, but I've had three really good drummers play it-- and they all said it sounded really good!
I commend you for your patience and skill in upgrading the snare shaped paper weight. That is, it was a paper weight before you upgraded it. After it is a decent sounding drum. Plus just knowing the quality improvements you made makes it that much more attractive to own.
Try VibraFibing it. That is, applying a layer of Fiberglas to the inside of the shell. Neal Peart used to have his Tamas treated this way which added punch and sustain. Not sure if he did this with the DWs as the wood and ply structure was so carefully chosen. Be curious to see the change in tone.
@ 5:40 - this little trick to dampen the spring with cotton wool is similar to the method used to deaden the "spring" sound on a Strat-style tremolo, only I use cut sponge foam rather than cotton woo and have it actually inside the springs - which of course are larger than these drum ones so it's quite easy
Inside the Gibson Tour Buses, they use snare shells with coated heads on the ceiling lights. The hand rail getting on the bus is a guitar neck. Amazing tour bus.
Neil Peart's main touring and recording snare, a Slingerland Artists Model 3 ply 5.5 x 14" cost about $60 and came from a thrift store. It sounded great to him and would NEVER choke which, if you're Neil Peart, is a big deal. Used it on every Rush tour and album from 1977 to 1997. Give every snare a chance, even the thrift store and Amazon ones. You never know.
I did a similar thing with a cheap steel student snare. A little rtv under the flanges, and a little rubberized undercoating inside, the snare "calmed" down from it's annoying "pang" to a crisp, and drier cut. Sounded like a $350 hammered steel snare. Same top and bottom remo heads you installed.
just like with guitars/basses. you can take a $100-150 guitar and do some customizing, and it will sound like a $1,000-1500 guitar. its not hard ...if you know what you are doing. or take one thats ragged out, it can be brought back to life without much effort or money.
My mind is blown because I did a lot of the same mods on the exact same snare that I bought for my nephew for Christmas. The big difference being that I trued and routed the edges giving the reso side a sharp double 45 degree and put 2 thin coats of shellac on the inside.
Very late to this but if you want to add some sharp snap to the drum add 5 or 6 layers of fiberglass to the inside of the drum. If you do it, make sure the grain of the glass is orientated differently for each layer. Wrap the outside of the drum with painters tape in line with the lug hole pattern and tape the rest of the holes on the outside of shell. This is just to prevent resin bleed through. You might be pleasantly surprised when done. It should have a lot of interesting piccolo characteristics but still be a 5.5" drum.
Funny enough I just the same thing a few years ago to my Pearl Prestige Session Select. Just finessed the bearing edges, gave the raw inner shells a light pass over with a fine steal wool and rubbed in some tug oil. I kinda love doing that now. It protects it and it kinda beefs up the tone just a tad which I like, especially on a birch shell.
I'm a guitarist/bassist......have played drums (very basic)...... but never knew my share could of sounded better by such simple adjust ments....,good video dude😊
I actually have that snare with black finish. But i spent nearly $200 refinishing it. I got new hoops, new rods, a DW MAG Throw Off with a 3 position butt plate and DW tension rods. Then i bought new snares from puresound. I took the wrap off to refinish all the shell. After that i painted the wood with a glossy natural to black shade (with black hardware because black looks amazing) then put everything together with a remo powerstroke on top and ambassador for the bottom. You can say i wasted money but i honestly think it sounds amazing and looks amazing too.
Most snare drums sound horrible straight out of the box, even a $600 snare. I work in a drum shop and open them all the time. Rarely do they ever come tuned (there is a reason for that). Everything comes loose, like my ex.
see people this is why you ptta put more money into your hardware and cymbals first. you can make a ehh snare sound ok but you cant make bad cymbals sound good
My cheap cymbals sound great!! They're made of rubber but sound like the $700 cymbal they recorded samples of in a million dollar studio to put in my drum module!
This is more or less the advice I was given when I started out. If you're touring the pub circuit, some well-placed mics and a properly-adjusted EQ can make your thin, crappy kick and toms sound like the real deal. Cheap cymbals, though? No way. You can't hide the sound of kitchen utensils being smashed together.
I used to use that same snare combo! Now I’ve been using the Remo Controlled Sound X and Evans Hazy 300’s on the reso sides. Also I switched to Phat Cat snares after I got a set on sale at a local shop to replace the Pure Tones I had and ended up liking the responsiveness even more.
Lars used a Tama Bell Brass snare on St. Anger. 6" or 8" depth by 14". I believe all his drums were raw, only using overhead microphones. But yeah the tone on the snare was obnoxiously horrible.
I have this exact snare drum. New heads,new snares. Took it to a large venue. The sound guy said it sounds great. But, here’s the problem. The feel. No matter how tight i cranked the tension rods it felt like i was playing on a pillow. It’s decent for home use though.
I used a solution of 60% Satin urethane and 40% acetone on my 6 ply birch Ludwig "accent" kit, made the wood hard without coating the surface which sounds kind of plastic-ish to me. I did heavy coat, then light, and light, and my low rent birch kit, booms like a 6 ply maple, nice rich tone..
I actually refinished my Ludwig accent kit when the wrap peeled off and when I did that I did coat the interior with polyurethane, as well as cleaned up the bearing edges, added gaskets and did your cotton ball trick except I used that egg foam stuff. And the kit sounded so much better when I was done.
You have inspired me to drag out my mid 70s Wood Fiberglass Pearl Kit and clean it up, tune it up, and set it up for recording! Great tips and techniques, thanks a bunch!
Iv seen snared that have huge air vents like 2-3 inchs i think you should cut some and see what it does to the sound and im guessing that would make the shell even weaker so put some reinforcement rings in
Don't ask me what brought me here....I was watching Jacko beat the bass and this caught my eye. Yes, I asked myself why you are modding with new heads and such just to bring the $40 cost up to the $110 snare you mentioned earlier without all the work. But no matter....I really enjoyed the video...really nice production. Thanks for the knowledge.
I would customize it even more, removing the manufacturer's logo and putting your own (a nice side project) and then just donate it to someone from your subs. would be a nice story to tell at dinner parties
Two thoughts hit immediately: 1) That "straight out of the box" sound is how emo/alt rock/pop drummers are tuning their snares these days. 2) Welcome back to the 80's...lug packing is what we used to have to do in those days with ALL drums (if we were recording in a studio), even the high-end drums, before manufacturers started to use nylon, neoprene, and other materials ... and then did away with the need for such things by changing the design of their lugs so that the swivel nuts are held in place with a plastic insert. It was a trip back in time seeing cotton going into lugs again!
I have this same exact snare,put new heads and wires on it,tuned it real good,and it sounds as good as the 300 dollar job my friend has. great video with lots of good tips.
@@genryhennis2102 And pliers, hammers, power drill, circular saw, various hand saws, grinder, recip. saw, drill bit sets, bench vise, vise grips, channel locks, etc. etc. etc....
@@snakeknife7518 all you really need is a drum key and a screwdriver lol most important things he did were replace the heads and the snares and those or the only tools required to do so
This is something that I am wanting to try my self...on the batter side put a conga head on it and leave the snare side normal. You can lay with your hands, hot rods, brushes, mallet...get all kinds of cool and interesting sounds.
I have a distant family member that went through some horrible stuff at the hands of a close relative of theirs. My sister has recently adopted this kid and I just found out that he is extremely talented at many things, drums being his most passionate talent. I am going to my storage today to pull out what we have of an old drum set that my drummer used to play on, and we know for sure that there isn't a snare...Would you be willing to donate it for a good cause? Music is the best kind of therapy!
Hello and thanks fellow drummer. That snare sound just fine now! With all the work you did on it it is worth far more now that what you paid for it like in the 300 dollar range. I always enjoyed investing that kind of effort in low end snares, and worked them in gigs. Nice project for a young drummer. Great post!
I took a really cheap drum like this one and made a clock out of it. It sits on the wall in front of my practice space so I will know how long I've spent practicing. I love it. ;)
Must be something in the RUclips water as just yesterday I saw another similar review. ruclips.net/video/F28u0dw-2-s/видео.html Ideas for what to do with the snare: Send to Lars Ulrich. Idea for future video: Cheapest ride/crash/hi hats on Amazon.
man, i liked it straight out the box with no tuning. You thought it was horrible, but I thought it was great. But it sounded even better tuned up. I subscribed because I like the way you know exactly how to "fix up" a drumset with these minor improvements. When I get a cheap guitar, I do a long list of things to them to make them right.
A little late to the game, but you all have been asking, so here it is finally!
The Snare Used:
amzn.to/2AhHWI1
The giveaway winners will be announced at the end of this week. There is still time to enter! ruclips.net/video/3WUrhf6V1vw/видео.html
nice
im unable to enter the giveaway contest... i'm not in US... :(
You should buy another one and make the most thicc snare
You should turn it into a 14" roto tom
Can you make a snare out of a bass drum hoop?
me (a guitarist): that sounds pretty good
rdavidr: that sounded horrible
Only experience I have with the sound of a snare is putting a card between the strings of my guitar and getting the “snare” sound
Sameeeee
I'm a guitarist as well and it sounds horrible to me lol, I was just about to post a comment about how it sounds terrible but decided to reply onto yours instead. lifeless sounding snare. No inspiration what so ever.
D K well I guess you are big Brain
@@Robster-Craw Inspiration? Toss toss.
90% of an audience, especially live would never know the difference between a $2600 snare and a $70 snare (new heads and upgrades). Drummers get all hung up an this stuff. Studio, different story...
oh how true......in early 80's I bought a Lud #400 .....looking for the Zep sound.....silly me @ 15 y/o....My 5" sensitone I bought @ pawnshop for $40 sounds great w/a Carvin CM68 on it
This is 100% the issue I have with a lot of other musicians. You're making a song for the listener. They don't care if your instrument is made of maple or partially burned pallet wood with nails sticking out of it. Besides which, most people listen on laptops and telephones, with the best option being really shitty headphones.
In 9th grade my parents bought me a Tama Super Mahogany set with a metal Swingstar snare. Evens blue heads on the bass and toms and they sound AMAZING. The snare? My band teacher at the time did the cut an old head bead off and middle out, placing under the batter head and BOOM!! Meaty sound and EVERY one that hears it tells me, "That snare sounds amazing." And it does. It sounds beefy and full and despite being "cheap" it's great! Just because it costs an arm doesn't mean it's worth it.
Agreed. The tuning of the drum will make the difference, not the type of wood or whatever
*agrees in St. Anger”
TAMA should send David a snare... Upvote so they see this! :D
Derek Charette where your videos at? At least the man's doing something. And you don't have to hit hard if your drums sound good (his do). Much more room for dynamics if you play lower overall... But none of this matters because it's just a RUclips video. Don't be a douche. Just watch a different video.
+Josh Miller (Joshmillerdrum) guys let's leave the troll more room to do his thing lmao
Why am I just now seeing this thread haha.
Come on Tama!
Tama is so solid. Love their stuff.
Great video, man! I have a cheap kit that my students use during our lessons. I knew they were going to beat the heck out of any kit they use, and I figured it'd be a waste to get a more expensive kit if it was going to be trash in a couple years. So, all of the mods and maintenance tricks you suggest have been a big help in making my student-kit last longer and sound waaaaay better. =)
Make a whole budget/amazon drum set.
Yes! that would be so dope
Then at the end of the series give the set away using gleam.io or something.
That's a ton of work
@@ijuldzulfadli903 Tons of views.
@@iexecutionare he did a 20 dollar drum set
Sure it's not usable for a professional musician but you actually made the drum sound way better. I was impressed with the improved tone. Great job.
Donate it to your local elementary school band program.
My old elementary school had a supraphonic
Adams mines too
Or me I’m really poor
@@caladam2221 what?!
Only if the school has a jazz or concert band, otherwise, they only need marching snares. Our school had a closet of a half dozen set snares that were donations, but we never used them...
You have the PERFECT drum sound for my taste! But honestly once you tuned the drum it sounded just fine to me, even without the other improvements you made.
Make a drum kit entirely out of snare drums.
I am actually doing that minus the bass. The problem is tuning it where it makes sense with snares off.
Is that the jesu LP2 cover as your profile picture?
Andrew Ford Lars Ulrich’s signature drum set.
Coop3rdrummer did this
As a drummer I can confidently say that this is way more work than I'd ever be able to stomach. Cheers
Make a bass drum beater out of it. As in the whole drum hitting your bass drum.
FrustratedTurtle omg please
This
classic FrustratedTurtle comment
Cursed drum images.
It doesn't sound that bad.
Until the hoops are stuffed from a couple of rimshots!
Paul Burbridge good for practising
Right that is what i am saying
replaced with a quality head should be good to go.
same thoughts its um aight when tuned
A good snare drum sound is the essence of a good music production. I love the devotion you put into your strive for perfection. The end result is very convincing!
Man thanks for doing this experiment, all the techniques you are demonstrating are actually very helpful for people who wants to enhance the sound quality of the drums they get from budget drumsets!!! very cool!
a pro tip for cheap snare ... use the cheapest acoustic foam and place around the inner wall of the snare drum, that will kill the sound a bit but it compensates by adjusting the tension ... it definitely improves the sound.
If a beginner don't have that much money for a better snare... I mean better than nothing👍🏾
I get that
Dave, I think you should cut the snare to like 4-3 inches and add some jingles to it to try and make a jungle snare. I think it would be pretty cool and original.
Jambo ...and than a bassdrum beater out of it.
original...meh
Give it away to some lucky kid that just started playing. You really made it the best it could possibly be. For that price it sounded pretty nice.
You should put rivets in the snare
I second this.
i fourth this
fith
I guess I sixth this. Is that something one can do?
what does that do?
A fun and interesting little project. If you are like me, a drum junkie, than it makes perfect sense. I confess, I did almost exactly the same things you did. I tried something a little different with the springs in the cheap old style Pearl lug knock offs. I used spray -in foam insulation. Spray for like a nano second or you end up with a blob of foam you have to use a razor knife to sculpt the lug back into being. But it works. As for what to do with it, I ended up doing three of them, one in each of the finishes they were selling them in on ebay at the time..and gave them to a local Catholic elementary school band so kids who's folks couldn't afford to buy stuff like that would have something to learn on. (I'm not Catholic, but they aren't rich. So we're even... : ) Thanks for posting this. It's a fun watch.
Waits a whole month to open a box!? I open it as soon I pick it up!
*"DAvE wHAt ARE YA DOIN, THoose HEADS aNd SnAres COST wAY MORE THan THE actual DRUM DAvE, WHaT ARE Ya DOiN MAaaN"*
Dave: *aAaAaaaaAaaAaaaaA*
You should hang the snare in a forest and record yourself acting surprised about it.
Edgy Little Boi come to watch some drum vids cause fed up of seeing Logan Paul shit I can't escape from it
Harry Charles yeah.
ffs
And then start laughing and making jokes about it too.
Lmfao
I used Tung Oil on my 7 piece Mapex Venus Series kit.. it started out as a 5 piece (22x16, 12x9, 13x11, 16x16, and came with a 14x5.5 snare for $140) all made from basswood. I live in Florida and while it was stored inside a guys house I still felt the need to treat the inside of the shells. I then ran across 2 more toms (8x8 and 10x8 for $40) which I purchased from the same guy who sold me the 5 piece kit. Sad thing is he lived almost 2 hours away and could of just sold me the 2 extra toms last time I got the 5 piece. But thanks to your videos Im now a craigslist watcher lol. I took off the old wrap and used some self adhesive wrap from Amazon. I purchased all new heads and even went as far as to get another snare (Mapex MPX 14x8 maple snare) all of my toms and bass drum heads are Evans... I got the EC2 batters with EC reso heads. My bass drum has the EMAD2 with the bigger muffling ring. But for my new snare i purchased the Remo reverse controlled dot batter and the Ambassador clear snare side heads. Even though Mapex put Remo's coated UV batter with a remo clear UV reso... but after swapping the heads i got the full snare sound. My question though is what would you suggest for dampening? Ive tried that moon gel but it seems to do nothing. While restoring the kit (i turned the bass drum into a virgin bass by filling the tom mounting holes with wood pudy.) Then I used wood bondo for the dents and dings on the bass (i tried to skip that process but once i started putting the new wrap on you could see where the dents were.) Your channel has encouraged me to continue fixing up my kit and after a month of sanding, patching, sanding, using tung oil, and some more sanding... my kit was complete. I only used 2 coats of Tung Oil on the inside of each tom and the bass drum. I left the snare drums alone but after seeing this I may try a coat on the original snare that came with the kit. I dont want to mess up my maple snare. Now that Ive got a 7 piece drum kit that I repaired (mostly cutting out rubber grommets from a sheet of rubber i purchased from amazon) and having spent hundreds on 2 double tom mounts w/ an accessory clamp for cymbals (currently i have 6 cymbals). Im looking for a decent 3 or 4 piece kit. Any suggestions? After wrapping this last kit im not entirely worried about the wrap or how ugly it looks. I mainly check the inside of the shells for rust or corrosion on the screws/washers. Also i look for damage done to the wooden shells. My next set will use Remo coated heads as I see most kits with awesome tom tones have those Remo coated heads. But Im sure the type of wood the drum kit is made of makes a huge difference as well. Thus why Im writing you a book on your old post lol but Ive got a few friends who want to play reggaeton type music and I feel my Basswood mapex Venus series isnt really tuned or styled to play that type of music. The pitch that my drums are tuned too is geared more towards progressive rock. Any suggestions or tips would be greatly appreciated. But again thank you for posting a the videos you do about purchasing cheap equipment and making it sound good. Long live the bearded drummer!!! Lol
I think what you did to the snare was great, and you got a decent sound out of it! I have been a drummer for many years, and if nothing else, you have shown younger drummers techniques they can use on other drums, and different ways to get a better sound. Keep up the good work, some time in the future that snare could save the day, and impress a trained ear!
Make a subkick with it
That's what I'm doing with a crap snare I have.
Smart, would love to see this.
1:35 Who's been looking for that St. Anger snare sound....you got it for $37.95!!
And not the over 3 grand that Tama bell brass Ulrich Signature is priced... Real deal! 🤔😅
Swiss cheese the crap out of this snare. To the point where it's about to fall apart.
that is exactly what I was thinking actually haha. I bought a new hole saw set a month ago that needs breaking in ;)
rdavidr please do.
rdavidr yes yes yes
I'd recommend SEVERAL more coats of tung seed oil prior to the "swiss cheesing" lol
and then do a cover of 'i fall apart'
I bought this snare a year ago. I took the top head off and coated the interior with Elmer's Wood Stabilizer, sanded and waxed the rim, then put on a decent top head. I suck at drumming, but I've had three really good drummers play it-- and they all said it sounded really good!
I vote piccolo snare conversion or clock.
Ooooooooo,I vote "clock",like Kenny here suggested!!! That'd look so cool!!!
menom7 I have made a drum clock. Check out the video I made about the build!
I commend you for your patience and skill in upgrading the snare shaped paper weight. That is, it was a paper weight before you upgraded it. After it is a decent sounding drum. Plus just knowing the quality improvements you made makes it that much more attractive to own.
Try VibraFibing it. That is, applying a layer of Fiberglas to the inside of the shell. Neal Peart used to have his Tamas treated this way which added punch and sustain. Not sure if he did this with the DWs as the wood and ply structure was so carefully chosen. Be curious to see the change in tone.
@ 5:40 - this little trick to dampen the spring with cotton wool is similar to the method used to deaden the "spring" sound on a Strat-style tremolo, only I use cut sponge foam rather than cotton woo and have it actually inside the springs - which of course are larger than these drum ones so it's quite easy
Turn it into a lamp
Gaz Jones81: creative.
faht lei. Well it's not much use as a snare if RdavidR isn't going to use it.
Lmao!
Inside the Gibson Tour Buses, they use snare shells with coated heads on the ceiling lights. The hand rail getting on the bus is a guitar neck. Amazing tour bus.
möth
Neil Peart's main touring and recording snare, a Slingerland Artists Model 3 ply 5.5 x 14" cost about $60 and came from a thrift store. It sounded great to him and would NEVER choke which, if you're Neil Peart, is a big deal. Used it on every Rush tour and album from 1977 to 1997.
Give every snare a chance, even the thrift store and Amazon ones.
You never know.
If you aren't planning on using the snare, add it to the give away! It'll make someone happy!
I did a similar thing with a cheap steel student snare. A little rtv under the flanges, and a little rubberized undercoating inside, the snare "calmed" down from it's annoying "pang" to a crisp, and drier cut. Sounded like a $350 hammered steel snare. Same top and bottom remo heads you installed.
just like with guitars/basses. you can take a $100-150 guitar and do some customizing, and it will sound like a $1,000-1500 guitar. its not hard ...if you know what you are doing.
or take one thats ragged out, it can be brought back to life without much effort or money.
One of the best channels on youtube. You sir make my drum OCD go away. The low budget improvements are so satisfying.
Even with the stock heads and the stock wire, after the tuning it sounded good and pretty usable.
My mind is blown because I did a lot of the same mods on the exact same snare that I bought for my nephew for Christmas. The big difference being that I trued and routed the edges giving the reso side a sharp double 45 degree and put 2 thin coats of shellac on the inside.
The shit went POP..just like every other snare drum out there. Drummers often analyze this stuff too much.
lol you're an idiot.
i only liked it because it was at 68 likes
what a transformation ,, you have turned this basic snare into a great sounding drum well done to you sir .
Drill a bunch of holes in it. THE HOLY SNARE!!!
BullFrog Then chuck a genera dry head on it and it becomes an ultra dry snare.
Very late to this but if you want to add some sharp snap to the drum add 5 or 6 layers of fiberglass to the inside of the drum. If you do it, make sure the grain of the glass is orientated differently for each layer. Wrap the outside of the drum with painters tape in line with the lug hole pattern and tape the rest of the holes on the outside of shell. This is just to prevent resin bleed through. You might be pleasantly surprised when done. It should have a lot of interesting piccolo characteristics but still be a 5.5" drum.
Casey cooper plays with fire sticks. You should play with fire drums
Funny enough I just the same thing a few years ago to my Pearl Prestige Session Select. Just finessed the bearing edges, gave the raw inner shells a light pass over with a fine steal wool and rubbed in some tug oil.
I kinda love doing that now. It protects it and it kinda beefs up the tone just a tad which I like, especially on a birch shell.
when are you going to remake the Remote Hihat for the suitcase drum set??
I'm a guitarist/bassist......have played drums (very basic)...... but never knew my share could of sounded better by such simple adjust ments....,good video dude😊
You should find the cheapest drum kit and do the same thing.
he already did...
twice
I think..
He did it with the 40 dollar drum kit and the 20
I actually have that snare with black finish. But i spent nearly $200 refinishing it. I got new hoops, new rods, a DW MAG Throw Off with a 3 position butt plate and DW tension rods. Then i bought new snares from puresound. I took the wrap off to refinish all the shell. After that i painted the wood with a glossy natural to black shade (with black hardware because black looks amazing) then put everything together with a remo powerstroke on top and ambassador for the bottom. You can say i wasted money but i honestly think it sounds amazing and looks amazing too.
That thing sounded like an aluminum trash can at first
Colossus Co. Look up the LP Raw snare on RUclips.
Colossus Co. Fr
Yeahh that's the spirit man. Keep rocking
St angerrrrrrrrr
Most snare drums sound horrible straight out of the box, even a $600 snare. I work in a drum shop and open them all the time. Rarely do they ever come tuned (there is a reason for that). Everything comes loose, like my ex.
“But how does it sound” I started to die😂 when he first played it but he always has a comeback!
see people this is why you ptta put more money into your hardware and cymbals first. you can make a ehh snare sound ok but you cant make bad cymbals sound good
Exactly
My cheap cymbals sound great!! They're made of rubber but sound like the $700 cymbal they recorded samples of in a million dollar studio to put in my drum module!
This is more or less the advice I was given when I started out. If you're touring the pub circuit, some well-placed mics and a properly-adjusted EQ can make your thin, crappy kick and toms sound like the real deal. Cheap cymbals, though? No way. You can't hide the sound of kitchen utensils being smashed together.
This.
I used to use that same snare combo! Now I’ve been using the Remo Controlled Sound X and Evans Hazy 300’s on the reso sides. Also I switched to Phat Cat snares after I got a set on sale at a local shop to replace the Pure Tones I had and ended up liking the responsiveness even more.
So this is what Lars used in St. Anger...
Yes. Definitely. haha
Gotta love that lars was tryn to be unique and ended up pissing the music community off!!! Lol
st.anger snare is not quite unique. Ukrainian hardcore band called Skinhate used at 100% the same snare like st.anger, but in 1998)
Lars used a Tama Bell Brass snare on St. Anger. 6" or 8" depth by 14". I believe all his drums were raw, only using overhead microphones. But yeah the tone on the snare was obnoxiously horrible.
😂
That drum key cinematography....!!!👌👌👌
I play guitar and don't even play drums and really enjoyed this video haha
I have this exact snare drum. New heads,new snares. Took it to a large venue. The sound guy said it sounds great. But, here’s the problem. The feel. No matter how tight i cranked the tension rods it felt like i was playing on a pillow. It’s decent for home use though.
You should slice it in two and try to make an adjustable height snare
I used a solution of 60% Satin urethane and 40% acetone on my 6 ply birch Ludwig "accent" kit, made the wood hard without coating the surface which sounds kind of plastic-ish to me. I did heavy coat, then light, and light, and my low rent birch kit, booms like a 6 ply maple, nice rich tone..
Hey Dave, you should make a video about practicing. (Practice pads, rudiments, etc)
Nate sounds like a moron.
marty sounds like an asshole
David. You are one of the most patient people I’ve ever seen. I commend you my friend. 👍🏼
why do i rewatch this video all the time?
Dude, there's something about this video that just made me smile (in a good way). It's also very informative. Thank you.
Make a piccalo drum out of it :)
I actually refinished my Ludwig accent kit when the wrap peeled off and when I did that I did coat the interior with polyurethane, as well as cleaned up the bearing edges, added gaskets and did your cotton ball trick except I used that egg foam stuff. And the kit sounded so much better when I was done.
Dude you should totally make a bass drum beater out of an egg shaker thing
I know the things inside it would fall out, but I mean like adhere it to the top of a 1/4” inch rod
You have inspired me to drag out my mid 70s Wood Fiberglass Pearl Kit and clean it up, tune it up, and set it up for recording! Great tips and techniques, thanks a bunch!
Iv seen snared that have huge air vents like 2-3 inchs i think you should cut some and see what it does to the sound and im guessing that would make the shell even weaker so put some reinforcement rings in
Don't ask me what brought me here....I was watching Jacko beat the bass and this caught my eye. Yes, I asked myself why you are modding with new heads and such just to bring the $40 cost up to the $110 snare you mentioned earlier without all the work. But no matter....I really enjoyed the video...really nice production. Thanks for the knowledge.
Yeah, but the 110$ snare also comes with a crappy stock head (Remo UT at best..) that you'll need to replace shortly
I would customize it even more, removing the manufacturer's logo and putting your own (a nice side project) and then just donate it to someone from your subs.
would be a nice story to tell at dinner parties
I've been drumming for 18 years, but never seen the inside of a lug. Thank you for showing me something new! =)
Great respect for your work! But imho it makes more sense to spend 100 bucks on a used brand snare than pimp a cheap one!
someone with common sense!
I like the groove you used to demonstrate the sound after your modifications.
You should turn this into a lamp...
If you're not gonna play it... at least look at it once in a while ;)
Mount a leg to it, christmas story style
The production on this video is incredible dude
Sounds like st anger
Totes! haha
Rayvin hahaha
No
*better than
Two thoughts hit immediately: 1) That "straight out of the box" sound is how emo/alt rock/pop drummers are tuning their snares these days. 2) Welcome back to the 80's...lug packing is what we used to have to do in those days with ALL drums (if we were recording in a studio), even the high-end drums, before manufacturers started to use nylon, neoprene, and other materials ... and then did away with the need for such things by changing the design of their lugs so that the swivel nuts are held in place with a plastic insert. It was a trip back in time seeing cotton going into lugs again!
It's probably made from poplar
yes, it is made from poplar. I just read the link and it says it right there... lol
It's my go to guess for any cheap drum lol
Awaclus god dammit lol
Oh god
I can assure you, there is NOTHING wrong with Poplar as a wood for making drums. Its not what you use, but how you use it.
I have this same exact snare,put new heads and wires on it,tuned it real good,and it sounds as good as the 300 dollar job my friend has.
great video with lots of good tips.
"And requires basically no tools"
Proceeds to use a drill and a screw driver
Face The Bear pretty much everyone has a screwdriver. Don’t need a drill but it helps speed the process up
dude how do you not have a drill and a screw driver
@@ezicarus8216 yeah apparently
@@genryhennis2102 And pliers, hammers, power drill, circular saw, various hand saws, grinder, recip. saw, drill bit sets, bench vise, vise grips, channel locks, etc. etc. etc....
@@snakeknife7518 all you really need is a drum key and a screwdriver lol most important things he did were replace the heads and the snares and those or the only tools required to do so
This is something that I am wanting to try my self...on the batter side put a conga head on it and leave the snare side normal. You can lay with your hands, hot rods, brushes, mallet...get all kinds of cool and interesting sounds.
2:15 I'd literally murder for a snare that sounds half as good as that
This needs more views. You seem extremely knowledgeable and I really enjoyed this to the end.
Lars ulrich just called
He wants his snare back
Good one
bahahahahahaha
2003 called. They want their Lars snare joke back.
@Wodsobe Dobe Unoriginal people yes.
You can make any drum sound good with the right skins.
I have a distant family member that went through some horrible stuff at the hands of a close relative of theirs. My sister has recently adopted this kid and I just found out that he is extremely talented at many things, drums being his most passionate talent. I am going to my storage today to pull out what we have of an old drum set that my drummer used to play on, and we know for sure that there isn't a snare...Would you be willing to donate it for a good cause? Music is the best kind of therapy!
hope he's ok 3 years later
I would of just changed heads, but that sandpapering the edges was smart, glad u did this
You should make a Damascus steel metal snare drum. Because why not
Hello and thanks fellow drummer. That snare sound just fine now! With all the work you did on it it is worth far more now that what you paid for it like in the 300 dollar range. I always enjoyed investing that kind of effort in low end snares, and worked them in gigs. Nice project for a young drummer. Great post!
arrrgh, now i want to buy another snare and have absolutely no need for one....
I took a really cheap drum like this one and made a clock out of it. It sits on the wall in front of my practice space so I will know how long I've spent practicing. I love it. ;)
you could donate the snare to a public school's music program!
Pretty good sound in the end. Shows how good a good set of heads can make to the sound.
Must be something in the RUclips water as just yesterday I saw another similar review.
ruclips.net/video/F28u0dw-2-s/видео.html
Ideas for what to do with the snare: Send to Lars Ulrich.
Idea for future video: Cheapest ride/crash/hi hats on Amazon.
Hey Dave, fellow Richmonder over here. Good stuff! Just got started with a cheap set, so this kind of stuff is really helpful.
Piccolo snare?
man, i liked it straight out the box with no tuning. You thought it was horrible, but I thought it was great. But it sounded even better tuned up. I subscribed because I like the way you know exactly how to "fix up" a drumset with these minor improvements. When I get a cheap guitar, I do a long list of things to them to make them right.