Drum
building projects that use drum wraps are my favorite projects to work on. Why?
Because the project moves along fast, there's minimal effort for a maximum
effect, and you can get really creative with stripes, custom drum wrap designs,
color combinations, and more.
Not
to mention, drum wraps are very tough. Knocking your kick mixer truck drum roller on the door handle
of the club isn't as devastating with a wrap than it is when you have a nice
high gloss lacquer. Chips and dents versus light scratches in a wrap? I'll take
the scratches!
When
I was building for a major custom company, I was wrapping between three to five
drum kits a day. So here's some tips.
#1:
My favorite option: Design Your Own Drum Set.
You
can send custom designs and even your favorite fabric to get laminated. This is
honestly the easiest drum building project to assure that the outcome is a 100%
unique drum set. If you are a graphic designer, than you have no excuse!
#2:
Sand Before Gluing
And
you thought you could escape the sand paper! Sand the back of the drum wrap
with #320 grit paper before applying your glue. This allows the glue to latch
onto something... and helps with creating an unstoppable bond.
#3:
Precise Drum Wrap Ordering
A
common mistake with first time drum building ordering is NOT being precise
enough when ordering your wrap pieces.
When
you order, give exact widths and order the length of the drum wrap with a 1.5
" overlap for all drums 16" in diameter and under. Any projects with
drums OVER 16" need a full laminate sheet (54"), plus a patch piece.
To
figure out your patch piece length... find the circumference of your drum
shell, add 3" to it and minus this number by 54. Always round up. For
example, an 18" drum would need a 6" patch piece (do the math!!).
#4:
Batch Your Drum Wrapping
If
you haven't heard me use the drum building term "batching"... it
simply means to group all similar drum building activities together.
At
one point when I was working for a big custom company, I was wrapping three to
five drum kits in one day. That's a lot of measuring, cutting, gluing, rolling,
etc.
The
solution? Batch all your activities! Whether or not you're building for a
company or doing it on a lesser scale... you'll save a ton of time and hassle
by batching your work.
For
example, glue all the wraps at once. While they are drying, glue all the drum
shells. Wrap all the shells, and then use the laminate roller on all the
shells. Tape all the overlap seams, and then trim any wrap of the shells, etc.
#5:
Use The J-Roller
An
often overlooked step in drum building is the post drum wrap treatment. Most
drum building gurus have huge laminate press' to rid the drum of air bubbles
and to help cement the bond of the wrap.
However,
the same effect can be achieved with a hand-held J-Roller. Using a J-Roller
around the drums with good pressure helps your drum building project
tremendously. It helps avoid wrap warping, bubbling, sound deadening (tone is
killed from air bubbles), and more.
#6:
Let Them Do the Cuts
Let
the suppliers that you order your wrap from cut your stripes. Letting them do
the work cuts down the necessary tools in the drum building project and also
guarantees that if someone messes up, it's not you and it WILL be replaced.
But
if you're deep into some crazy drum building ideas and you want to cut wrap
yourself...the straight edge cutting jig gets the job done.
#7:
Wrap Your Tom and Snare Drum Hoops
A
cool drum building trick is to wrap your wood hoops. You can do it with
traditional wood hoops, wood hoops with t-rod holes, and regular triple flanged
metal hoops (use a different glue like "Gorilla Glue").
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