
Talldog
Pain in the ass
Anybody ever used one of these? They look kind of cool.
I meant sound wise. Is the sound good/different enough to even bother.
So THAT'S what that thing is!! Last summer, when we did the rock n roll summer camp, at the Boca Raton camp Scot Stapp's son and nephew attended the camp, and we ended up schlepping a drum kit from his house to the camp (they wanted to rent a kit at the last minute, and we were all out- so we charged them a very reasonable amount to transport their kit to the camp.) The kid wanted to bring that along, and I (mistakenly) thought it was a kick drum sub-woofer and told him we would not need it. Now I am wishing we had taken it along- time permitting, it would have been interesting to try it out.
I think I might make one. Sounds about as easy as it could be- anyone want to venture a guess as to:
What would be the best speaker design- Yammie uses a 6.5", would an 8" work well? I would guess you would want to use a speaker with a smaller voice coil and light-weight cone, so that the sound waves would more easily get the cone moving, the cone more easily create a current signal than a more heavy-duty speaker would do?
I am guessing the "heads" are really just circles of plywood? That the drum shell is used just for looks- you could house the "microphone" in just about anything? Heck, perhaps you could just put a car audio sub on a stack of books, in front of the kick, and wire it to an XLR connection?
Hey Stevie, were you able to find the old threads about the home made subkick microphone?
You lost me, moresound. ONly thread I am aware of that addresses this is this one.
if it's worth anything, i use a 10" 600watt pioneer car sub in an mdf box. Cost about £45 for both, and i wired a 10db attenuator on a cable.
Sounds outstanding![]()
Try a search on the subject in the DIY forum. I've seen a few threads about the construction a few years back.
Kinda cool seeing everyone's projects.