latzanimal wrote:
However, I am certain that most drummers and audience members do not know the difference, are able to hear a difference, or care...
I suspect that drummers can hear the differences. I don't think we know why the differences exist, except by hearsay.
Whether we care or not is another matter. Since a perfect drum would be a non-existant drum, it must be the imperfections that give character. I am drawn to the different, even unique character in some drums.
I generally prefer deeper snares. But I love my x5 Gretsch, when used with the Gretsch kit (haven't tried it with Designers, so don't know if it would make the transition). What fascinates me is that it works with an Emperor snare side head under a Fiberskyn Diplomat batter, which goes against everything I thought I knew about snares.
What am I trying to say?
I don't think I understand how drums work. I'm not sure drum builders do, either. What they do know, hopefully, is what works for them; a standard can be created around that particularity. Sonor has done that, Gretsch has done that. Can't speak to the others, but I assume it to be true of any company that takes pride in its output. (One of my problems with SQ is that it lacks this particularity, but that's another story.)
Stuffing the shells with rubber bits is a very odd solution to a problem I haven't figured out what it is. What makes it odd is that the rubber decomposes and, particularly if your drums are German, the cost of replacing them is stupid, should you happen to need them before they become obsolete. But okay, if in the pursuit of perfection it becomes necessary to create bonds that dissolve by the Laws of Nature, then I suppose we can put up with it. But I really want to know how my life is going to be improved before I'm eager to accept the penalty.
Perhpas APS is just a continuation of the super heavy shell. "Now we can use rubber to control shell resonance, without resorting to weight and wood." When Sonor talks about projection and resonance, perhaps what they've meant, since the onset of Signatures, is isolating the head from the shell, thereby achieving a more fundamental tone.