CongaTick wrote:No man.... You gotta do it. I'm just sayin' ... alot easier if you have someone to help you out.
It was a bit of a "right of passage" thing for me. If I'm honest with myself, the first one was a bit tricky. The hardest thing is the 30 seconds it takes between getting the first hook connected and getting the opposite one threaded. A second set of hands for this would be very helpful.
I watched a djembefola string up one of my djembe's prior to attempting my first conga. When he did my djembe he put a series of small cuts around the perimeter of the skin (opposite each other 12&6, 3&9 and in between). He then used string to tie the head around the flesh hoop and to get it centered in the part of the skin that he wanted on the playing surface of the drum (i.e. it wasn't centered exactly in the round but rather in what he thought was the best spot).
He then pulled the strings quite tight and tied them, placed the head on the drum and set up all the hardware etc. I found this strategy quite helpful when doing it on my own, it took allot of the "wrestling a slippery alligator" out of it. Once the crown is set up, and my 2 hooks are set in and ready to go, I then cut loose al the string (it's impossible to pull the head down without doing this first). After some practice I haven't needed to string them up anymore, but this strategy may help you control the process a bit when you first try it. I also keep a pair of pliers handy and pull out all of the wrinkles in the head once I have all the hook on with just a couple threads holding the nuts on. From there, wrench the crown down to a bit above where you want it to sit permanently, set it in a stand and throw an oscillating fan on it while rotating the drum in the air flow every few hours (the stand is so air circulates through the bottom and the fan cuts quite a bit of time off the initial drying phase but isn’t actually necessary, someone I know puts an incandescent light up inside the drum for a day or so - it provides a bit of warmth and speeds things up a bit as well - I haven't tried both but would if I had an old light on the right stand). Personally I obsess about the head for the next 2-3 days, making minor adjustments to the crown, ensuring no wrinkles emerge during the initial stage, keeping a slight amount of tension on the head etc. I don't know how important this part is, but the drums I've done turned out great.
Leave them for at least a week before playing and tuning, preferably in a low humidity and moderately warm room. Even if the head feels dry it will probably have moisture inside it if you don't wait, tuning a wet head will cause it to pull down too much and not hold it's tone once you do it. This is just my personal amateur experience, I’m sure there are some pro’s out there who could provide some critiques to the strategies I used.
Cheers,
RR