Hookd on Phonics wrote:
A revelation I had with floor toms was understanding the relationship of the resonant head to the floor surface. Generally speaking, none of the other drums in a kit face the same acoustic environment! But there's a desire to get similar tuning results from floor toms as we get from our rack toms. Which is probably what initiated the whole Steve Gadd/Recording Custom suspended floor tom thing to begin with. Personally, I prefer legged floor toms over suspended toms.
On a problematic floor tom, one thing that's worked pretty well for me is the use of a heavier head, or even a dotted head on the resonant side of the drum.
Getting back to the floor itself, I have experimented with
various surfaces under the drum, such as foam mats, and even a square of Melamine shelving board under the drum. I would just take the drum out to different rooms and floors and retune it to find it's prime environment.
Or, you could buy Kelly's 15 and 16 inch Signature Bubingahhhs and be done with it!
My 15" Lite floor tom is the best sounding floor tom I've ever owned!
All the Best,
Brian
It sounds as if you are getting a perceived positive by adding a negative. The floor is reflecting the air movement and deflecting the resonance of the bottom head, which in turn is deflecting your top head. Using a heavier bottom head will slow everything down, create less resonance but perhaps because of that diminished resonance is in turn diminished less. In any case, the solution seems to be playing to the weakness of the system.
Now, perhaps you are getting the sound you want, and I wouldn't argue that. But if resonance is what is desired, then the solution is while retaining identical head weights and tuning, repositioning the toms. Angling the floor tom would break up the effect of "kickback." Raising the tom helps, too. I was surprised when I lifted the toms about two inches, how much more resonance was created.
I was skeptical, but now am delighted with my suspended and under-square "floors." The way those toms filled the theater the other night took me completely by surprise, and I no longer look at standing floor toms with envy. I still prefer the way they look, perhaps, but functionality is changing my views on aesthetics.