
Dogman
Unkle Ticklefingers
I swapped my top head to the Genera, and it helped with the ring I had before.
I totally disagree. Ringing is a result of a drum that IS tuned evenly. It is a harmonic overtone (which occurs at even intervals above the fundamental tone) like a guitar string has at certain points. They are the result of the vibration of small sections of the head, perhaps at the half, quarter, or eighth distance from the center.
If you use a coated or a thick heavy head, then that coating serves as a dampening layer which stops those finer overtones. It is the same fix as we are discussing but done internally instead of externally.
Ring tends to be made more apparent (or amplified) by the shell vibration. You could approach the problem with shell muffling as well.
If you tune the drum head so that the head tension is very uneven, then yes, that stops the overtones from surviving. However, it also ruins the head faster.
What you are fighting here is the natural behavior of a body under tension. In part, it is what gives the drum volume, sustain, and character. Some drummers embrace that ring sound and enjoy it as being uniquely "their sound."
If you are actually using a G1 on the bottom, that's the problem.
You need a snare-side head, which is thin enough. A G1 is 10mil thick. I think your average snareside head is .3mil thick.