SonoRon wrote:
I remember only a few days after I got my SQ2's delivered I set them up and took a million photographs of them. I uploaded these photos and of course my video on YouTube of me setting them up and was bombarded with negative comments with regards to my choice in not only the tom depths but the kick drum being drilled for my tom mount. Many of them worded "Why on earth would you get such a high end kit and have it drilled?!?" Since these comments I have often wondered what my kick would sound like undrilled. Then realising if I removed my track mount from my designer kick drum it would essentially be undrilled I thought what the hell I'll give it a try.
I was at a tuning clinic years ago with a guy called Jeff Davenport and he brought along a delite kit and an HLD 588 snare drum and he was explaining what the weight of the toms and sympathetic resonance (If that is the correct term??) did to the sound of the kick overall. I was amazed at the difference but preferred the sound with the drums on the kick as opposed to off hence my choice of tom mount on my SQ2 kick drum. Just wanted to try it for myself and see what I thought.
Will of course post my findings with you all.
The virgin kick (which is to say, no tom mount added) phenomenon began as a result of toms losing tone after being hung on any kind of mounting system, ergo the development of RIMS in the 1980s. The bass drum was a different issue, thin shells being deformed by the weight of mount and tom, even to the point of developing a permanent warp. Not many modern kits are likely to warp, but that was a significant problem in 50's and 60's kits.
Designer basses are 'virgin' with or without tracks, since nothing is added to, or subtracted from, the shell. The weight of the aluminum plate is minimal, and what weight there is is spread out by distributing it over four fairly distant points, rather than having it converge on a singular attachment point.
In theory and by modern wisdom, the best system would be no hardware touching any shell and no drums mounted to any other drum. While that may be an ideal, it is probably about as useful as the ideal shape of an automobile, vis a vis wind resistance, that would leave no room for passengers. There are other issues to consider, and there is an inverse graph of diminishing returns as the line approaches the ideal. Besides, some people like the effect of heavily encumbered drums. I have a friend who has a Lite kit with all original holders, his favorite kit. He owns a new SQ and considers it his expendable kit while he favors the Lites. So much has to do with the way you play and what your ear is expecting to hear, what cymbals you are using and how you tune.
Looking forward to hearing your take!