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PostPosted: Fri Dec 22, 2006 8:15 pm
by boogie
HAS ANYBODY TRIED THESE RUBBER CONGA FEET,THIS SIMPLE THING MAKES A WORLD OF DIFFRENCE

PostPosted: Sat Dec 23, 2006 10:22 pm
by deadhead
boogie, i've been interested in trying those, how is the stability of the drum with them on? Is it better, or is it wobbly?

PostPosted: Sun Dec 24, 2006 1:04 pm
by Diceman
Save yourself some money, use plastic pipe clips, the type nised to clip pipes to the wall.
Got this one from Niall Gregory on this forum and they are less fiddly, more solid, lighter, take up less room, cheap and can be got at your local hardware store.

Diceman

PostPosted: Sun Dec 24, 2006 2:28 pm
by onile
Alafia Abures!
I hope that you are all extremely well and in an abundance of blessings!

Abure Diceman! I totally concur with you "save yourself some money," I own some 'conga feet' (LP). At first I thought it would be the answer to getting a better sound out of the drum when playing seated, and yes it did work. The problem is that unless your drums have thick wood, or are just fat at the bottom, they will "wobble."

I was at a gig last month and I forgot to bring my "conga feet." I played the first set and being that the drums were on 'tile flooring', the sound was not as true as I would have liked. A very good friend of mine, and great fellow drummer (congas, timbales, bongo and traps), E.J. came up to me with an incredibly simple and cost effective solution 'on the spot'.

He grabbed some toothpicks (I was playing in a supper club), and he placed them underneath the two drums on either side of me, the center drum I have tilted forward, so there wasn't a need for that one. I tapped the drum and 'Booooooom!' there was the souund I was needing.

Now, I'm not recommending here that you go out and buy a box of toothpics and use them in place of a conga stand, no! What I did the next day however, was go to a local hardware store and buy some little "Heavy Duty Felt Pads", the kind used to prtect tables and countertops from scratches. They have self-adhesive and so I applied them to the bottom of the drums. Very inexpensive ($3.50 for a pack of 20), and so I bought a couple of extra packs which I carry in my gig bag.

Many blessings Abures!

Happy holidays!

Onile!

PostPosted: Mon Dec 25, 2006 9:41 pm
by pavloconga
Hey Onile,
thanks for that great suggestion! By the way, I have tried those LP rubber feet and really didn't like them. They were very wobbly, very fiddly and were prone to coming off at the worst times (e.g. during a gig).

So, with those felt pads that is all you need to improve the sound by so much? Cool. I will give it a try.

cheers
Pavlo

PostPosted: Tue Dec 26, 2006 5:36 am
by windhorse
I didn't have the best experience with "feet" either. I like the drum on the ground, and the difference in a raised drum - like a bomba note that stands out occassionally. You can only raise a drum for prominent notes when the drum isn't already raised.