RitmoBoricua wrote:Not bad at all, you did good. I can't see any seams. Looks like you left the original finish and all, it has that vintage (patina) thing going for itself. I think steel bands may need some tweaking and the bottom steel band is probably a bit too wide in relation to the other steel bands, but this is just cosmetic stuff. All in all, fantastic work in bringing back to life that Vergara drum.

Thanks.
The relatively thin oak staves had been painted black in a previous incarnation, so after gluing the staves back together with slow drying marine epoxy I gave it another coat of black to bring it back to life. I had to use a special old wood worker tool to scrape the old glue off the stave edges so as not to distort those edges. The trickiest thing was finding a system for reassembling all the staves once glue was applied and the clock was ticking. I made a low table with a circle cut out, then used specially fabricated assembly hoops with tabs on them, through which long (and slightly bent) rods of all-thread could be used to pull the staves together into their original configuration. I used two pairs of these assembly hoops. Before the glue set up there was much pounding with a rubber mallet to get all the staves lined up.
You are correct about the bottom hoop, I did make it kind of wide because I copied an old prototype GonBop in my collection, I just thought I wanted all that surface to help pull together the ragged ends of these staves. So it was a conscious decision even though knowing it probably was not the way it was originally. Cutting out and fabricating these stainless steel hoops was another tricky process. Stainless is not exactly easy to work with and after the curve was determined the pieces were cut out of a flat sheet of stainless on a band saw, then riveted. For some reason, in spite of my careful calculations these newly made replacement hoops did not sit down perfectly on the drum, that is why some look a bit off. I tried pounding them down with a special coopers tool I made, but they just didn't work perfectly and then I had to use screws to hold them in place, which you do anyway.
The top hoop, which was original, seemed too high to get the crown down over it very far. I knew that the heads sit up very high on the Vergara by design, but I decided to change this hoop to go down a bit further, that is why you see the bottom edge of the top hoop sitting right on the top edge of the side brackets. I needed every bit of room at top for the crown to be able to move down a bit more. I simply undid one of the two rivets and put it back together using only the one rivet. Meanwhile as the weather changed the snugglyl fit alma caused pressure on the staves and opened up a couple of the joints, so I had to address this and do a bit of re-gluing, no problem. Try as I would, I had to leave the other hoops they way they were in spite of a couple not fitting just right. I wasn't about to try making them over again, knowing how difficult it was in the first place, and not being sure I could do any better the second time.
As you see, the crown still sits is up pretty high, considering, and yet I still felt the need to cut some pieces of small diameter pipe as bushings (like washers) before the nuts on the pull down lugs. Many of my drum restorations end up needing this because one runs out of threads on the pulls.
The hard oak staves show some of the history of the drum and I did not feel any need to hide this, even though I gave it three coats more of black paint. This old hard oak does not yield much to sanding and it is a very old drum that had been around. There were several dents and large gashes that needed bondo. One could see the original oak surface under the old hoop positions, so I think it was originally showing the wood grain before someone along the way painted the drum black. There was over-spray evidence on some of the original stainless hoops. You can see a round plug in one of the staves, and all the staves are different widths. These drums were made from re-cycled oak barrels and the staves had been shaved down to make them thinner and more flexible and more sonorous. The alma itself shows evidence that it was recycled from some previous use in the Vergara shop since I see remnants of blacksmith rivets that serve no purpose in its use as an alma.
This is a 11 1/2" head, and the skin I used, although very high quality, probably needs to be a bit thicker, although it is nice and easy to play, there is somewhat of a ring, not helped by all the epoxy that ended up on the inside surface after all the re-gluing. I will play it like it is for awhile exploring all the nuances and sounds I can extract from this present skin. I have another old 10" Gon Bop that I restored which is the exact same height (~30") which pairs nicely with this Vergara as the lower drum. The Vergara is very tuneable, responding well to alterations of tensioning. There seems to be some wisdom to the fact that the head is so close in and sitting up high like this, if you know what I mean (as opposed to the trend to lower heads so much to "get the crown well out of the way". I have no problem at all with the crowns sitting up high on these vintage drums. I guess that crown was originally meant to sit up way higher than it is just under the top surface of the head!
Zeno