I don’t play in church or for a band, I just play in what I call my man cave, I was looking for ideas on a future drum encloser to build just to set my kit apart from the rest of the room and this looks awesome, and the lights on the inside look cool too.
I build a drum cage based off these designs and it turned out well. If you’re still interested let me know. I had been wanting to build an an enclosure for 2 years and one day happened to visit my girlfriend who went to a church. Walked in and realized it was this EXACT church. Lol.
MrFolder40 I second that! I'm really curious about how you secured the lexan glass to the wood bracing. You kind of skipped that part. But the finished product looks amazing!
Hey Curtis, I apologize for that part, unfortunately we couldn't include all of the details in this video due to technical difficulties. Shoot me an email and I'd love to answer any questions you have! johnathancristan@gmail.com
What are the measurements of the lexan? Where would you recommend purchasing the lexan that size from? Also how did you guys get the lexan to hold in place? I've looked and it's very hard to find lexan over 4ft x 7ft. Please Please Please help out bro. thanks in advance
I built a similar drum enclosure and the biggest size I was able to find was 6'x10'. I had to call a half dozen places to get a decent price. I got once piece that size and two 4'x6' pieces to go on the sides. As we bent the lexan, we drilled holes and used machine screws with washers to hold it in place.
I know this is a year late response, but I just put in an order with a local plastic company. You can call glass suppliers (for like windows and what not) as well, they gave me the contact to the plastic company to call. Hope it helps!
@@browserboy1984 because I don't agree with you I have a bad attitude? I've been playing for 55 years in every type of situation, different types of music, and worship bands. and your resume? if you'll take notice worship drummers are the only ones using "drummers in a bubble"
@@rhnstjegilrhkscvn1djhrj969 not necessarily. I've been in a few orchestral situations where the drummer has to adhere to dynamics and does so well, yet the need for a perspex is still needed simply because of proximity to microphones if its a full scale theatre type of production. I am also not a fan of full drum enclosures but at my church the acoustics are so reverberant that even with controlling my playing, the natural drum sound + FOH just gets out of hand so we've been considering putting an enclosure just for more sound control of the drums overall - nothing about the drummers not being able to have control. I'd imagine in your 55 years of playing you would have realized that there are more factors at play when you're working with different variables in less than ideal acoustic spaces.
@@soundslikedave_ hopefully we can agree to disagree. I've played in many environments. big stage and little stage, small clubs (less than ideal acoustics) big places. watch some videos of the popular groups, (christian or otherwise) very few will use a barrier. if there was going to be bleeding into mics it sure would happening in these situations. I'll stick with my first statement that it is all about control....been there done that. Sorry but.....
All you need to do is ask one of your audio engineers to give you a brief excerpt of a vocal mic from the multi-track recording. That will convince you. Also get them to make you a mix of the drums with and without the vocal mics turned on. Drum bleed ruins the vocals, it also ruins the drums, because you are miking the drums from 3 vocal mics off axis with delays of 10 ms, 20 ms, 30 ms respectively.
Corpus!!!! Maybe we will swing by when we are in town and come check yall out
I don’t play in church or for a band, I just play in what I call my man cave, I was looking for ideas on a future drum encloser to build just to set my kit apart from the rest of the room and this looks awesome, and the lights on the inside look cool too.
This would be dope for
You but a pain in the ass if you need the space quickly
I would like to know how much was the total cost of this project. If you do not mind.
Yes. 2022
WouldlikeToKnowhowMuchWasThe
CostOfThisProject.lf
Youdonotmind.
WasThetotal
@@faithgarcia86602,022$
what was the overall cost for everything?
Where did you guy purchase the glass ,can you guys post items used for other to build a similar one at our churches,please and thx
3 years ago lol
Wow this is super dope
So many DIY drum enclosure but none of them show the before and after of the drum raw sounds to compare how much it cut the volume.
This is awesome bro!
Thank you !🔥👏👍
Bravo nice copy of the Phoenix Drum Enclosure. They're actually worth every penny if you can afford it.
If I could afford phoenix I would buy it lol. But I hope I can afford to build one like this
What is the size and cost of the lexan acrylic sheet? Where did you purchase? Please post items list on description
Hey bro blessings where did you get the glass to buy
Can you record with a phone how loud it is from the front seats?
Tried to email you. What are the dimensions of your lexan?
Where did you guys get the glass
Gonna need more Lord in my monitor ..
How did you build the platform? Could you share the plans?
I build a drum cage based off these designs and it turned out well. If you’re still interested let me know.
I had been wanting to build an an enclosure for 2 years and one day happened to visit my girlfriend who went to a church. Walked in and realized it was this EXACT church. Lol.
@@gwillonthebass can you share the plans?
Whats up with those light panels on stage? Those are nice
How much did it cost in total?
How tall is it inside
What type of wood y'all used
Hello I am interested in building this exact drum enclosure. do you have the plans
Where do you purchase a curved plexi?
What is the size of the polycarbonate you are using and how many total polycarbonate
Where did you get a lexan sheet that big?
How did ya’ll put the actual glass on it and how did ya’ll secure it to the wood?
Hey dude thanks alot for this! It looks awesome. Do you happen to have the plans for the booth.
MrFolder40 I second that! I'm really curious about how you secured the lexan glass to the wood bracing. You kind of skipped that part. But the finished product looks amazing!
Hey Curtis, I apologize for that part, unfortunately we couldn't include all of the details in this video due to technical difficulties. Shoot me an email and I'd love to answer any questions you have! johnathancristan@gmail.com
MrFolder40 Yes I do! You can reach me at johnathancristan@gmail.com and I can send those your way!
MrFolder40 did you ever get a response from him? I would love those plans
@@MrFolder40 ok I just emailed you! thanks!
How thick is the glass?
what is the thickness of your studio foam ?
Those are cheap 1 inch panels it seems
Do you have plans for this that you would be willing to share?
Need an estimate on this enclosure or at least a ball park price as accurate as possible
How can we design an equipment rack
pleaseee tell us the prices and where to get it
What lights did you use in the enclosure?
Is there a website to buy one of these
What are the measurements of the lexan? Where would you recommend purchasing the lexan that size from? Also how did you guys get the lexan to hold in place? I've looked and it's very hard to find lexan over 4ft x 7ft. Please Please Please help out bro. thanks in advance
I built a similar drum enclosure and the biggest size I was able to find was 6'x10'. I had to call a half dozen places to get a decent price. I got once piece that size and two 4'x6' pieces to go on the sides. As we bent the lexan, we drilled holes and used machine screws with washers to hold it in place.
joel lewis where did you get your pieces from?
Where can I get tha glass from ?
Where do you find the 6' x 10' x 1/4" or 3/16" polycarbonate panels ??
I can only find 6' x 8' :-( HELP!!!
I know this is a year late response, but I just put in an order with a local plastic company. You can call glass suppliers (for like windows and what not) as well, they gave me the contact to the plastic company to call. Hope it helps!
Man I love this! Where u get the glass at?
Did you have any luck finding out where he got the glass?
Google a place that sells lexan near you or distributes it and will ship
Umm umm umm umm umm umm goodness man! Oh and umm umm umm.
Yup, I had to stop watching it because of that and just look through the comments for his source for the glass but no one seems to know
Is that a Church or a Night club.??
Um
Should’ve just a Roland electric kit!
Check your email lol. I sent you an email with some questions the other day
Did you ever get a response? Anything you can share with us...?
.........or you could control your playing
Nice attitude. That's not how it works, at all.
@@browserboy1984 because I don't agree with you I have a bad attitude? I've been playing for 55 years in every type of situation, different types of music, and worship bands. and your resume? if you'll take notice worship drummers are the only ones using "drummers in a bubble"
@@rhnstjegilrhkscvn1djhrj969 not necessarily. I've been in a few orchestral situations where the drummer has to adhere to dynamics and does so well, yet the need for a perspex is still needed simply because of proximity to microphones if its a full scale theatre type of production.
I am also not a fan of full drum enclosures but at my church the acoustics are so reverberant that even with controlling my playing, the natural drum sound + FOH just gets out of hand so we've been considering putting an enclosure just for more sound control of the drums overall - nothing about the drummers not being able to have control. I'd imagine in your 55 years of playing you would have realized that there are more factors at play when you're working with different variables in less than ideal acoustic spaces.
@@soundslikedave_ hopefully we can agree to disagree. I've played in many environments. big stage and little stage, small clubs (less than ideal acoustics) big places. watch some videos of the popular groups, (christian or otherwise) very few will use a barrier. if there was going to be bleeding into mics it sure would happening in these situations. I'll stick with my first statement that it is all about control....been there done that. Sorry but.....
All you need to do is ask one of your audio engineers to give you a brief excerpt of a vocal mic from the multi-track recording. That will convince you. Also get them to make you a mix of the drums with and without the vocal mics turned on. Drum bleed ruins the vocals, it also ruins the drums, because you are miking the drums from 3 vocal mics off axis with delays of 10 ms, 20 ms, 30 ms respectively.