by taikonoatama » Tue Mar 04, 2008 11:39 pm
Skin mounting: height, angle, loop distance
I know some of these things have been talked about here, but I'd like to open this topic anew with all three of these parameters in one place because they are so connected. Obviously other things factor in here in relation to the sound of a drum, but let's hit these here.
Skin mounting height (vertical distance between the top of the crown and the plane across the top of the head)
Does it affect sound and if so in what way?
My take:
Outside of sound, obviously a skin/crown mounted too high will hurt your hands, but the minimum height will vary from player to player, depending on technique. But we're talking more just about the sound here.
One way to think about the differences in sound is to think of extremes. Let's compare what we might hear if we were to mount the skin at one extremity of the spectrum, with the crown flush with the plane of the head, vs. having it a foot (30 cm) down the shell. My thinking is that in the latter case, all that extra skin is going to vibrate and in turn vibrate the shell, and also send vibrations back up to the main head, and that these side-skin- generated vibrations will clash with the those coming from the head and cause overrings. In the former case, with next to no side skin, this would not be an issue. But that's extremes (and I could be way off base, I realize), so how much would this figure into crowns/skins mounted say, 1/4" (62 mm) vs. 1" (2.5 cm). I do not know.
Angle of skin coming down off bearing edge
On some drums (like Skin on Skins with traditional crowns, and King Conga fiberglass congas), the crown is very tight to the shell, and so the skin as it comes over the bearing edge goes straight down the outside of the shell, actually staying in contact with the shell for a good ways, until just above the flesh hoop level. On the other extreme are a lot of drums with comfort curve crowns. The comfort curve, by its nature, forces the skin to come off the bearing edge in a much more flared out way. Once again, imagine extremes. Clearly the tight-to-the-shell style would not vibrate much on its own, whereas the comfort curve version would. Even at normal mounting distances, I wonder if the comfort curve angle and the extra skin that system hangs out there to vibrate leads to problematic overrings. I can't imagine this being an issue with the tight-to-the-shell style, though I suppose there could also be an effect on wood resonance at a certain point. In defense of the tight-to-the-shell style, my SoS's have a nice long resonant open tones without nasty overrings, and they don't seem choked off at all. Still, I don't know for sure.
Distance between crown loops
Probably not such a big deal with most drums having 5 or 6 lugs. You can see how having too great a distance between the lugs could be an issue, though, when you consider what a 2-lug drum would sound like. There's no way the skin that's near a non-lugged part of the crown would be as tight as that near one of the two lugs. It would be impossible to get it tuned right. More lugs balance this, of course, as do v-shaped crown loops that spread the tension across the crown rim. This parameter has largely been taken care of for some time.
Anyway, just some thoughts. Calling all acoustical engineers ...
James
Edited By taikonoatama on 1204674299