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Camco vs DW- retrospect Last viewed: 2 hours ago

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So... Camco made some of the best drums 50 years ago before Rogers was on top with the beavertail lugs...

Nowadays DW is the cream of the crop, so how would you compare the 2 in terms of wood quality, hardware quality etc.

Posted on 12 years ago
#1
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Dw is far above what Camco made, Dw has Multiple shell configurations not just one like camco had,

Dw's hardware is cutting edge and is leap years above what Camco had, Dw's uses a tighter or smaller thread count on their Tension Rods just pointing out only one of Dw's innovations.

Your drummers not much good is he!? What you need is someone that's as good as me. ! John Henry Bonham !!
Posted on 12 years ago
#2
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From vintagemore2000

Dw is far above what Camco made, Dw has Multiple shell configurations not just one like camco had, Dw's hardware is cutting edge and is leap years above what Camco had, Dw's uses a tighter or smaller thread count on their Tension Rods just pointing out only one of Dw's innovations.

True. But the number one miss for me is tone. Camco drums are some of the best sounding drums on the planet. I have yet to hear a DW set come even close to that awesome tone! Sometimes building the perfect shell isn't the answer.

1957 George Way BDP 26" concert bass drum
1959 George Way BDP 22/12/16 w/ 5.5x14
1959 George Way Green Sparkle 22/12/16 w/5.5x14
1961 George Way Blue Sparkle 20/12/15
1961 George Way Jelly Bean 20/12/14 w/4.5x14
1960’s Camco Oaklawn Champagne 20/12/14/16w/5x14
1971-73 Camco Chanute Walnut 24/14/18 w/5x14 COB
Posted on 12 years ago
#3
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From DolFan54

True. But the number one miss for me is tone. Camco drums are some of the best sounding drums on the planet. I have yet to hear a DW set come even close to that awesome tone! Sometimes building the perfect shell isn't the answer.

Steve I very much agree with you on that one.

Your drummers not much good is he!? What you need is someone that's as good as me. ! John Henry Bonham !!
Posted on 12 years ago
#4
Posts: 1597 Threads: 96
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I agree with you both DW does not sound anywhere as good as either Rogers or Camco of the 60's

Posted on 12 years ago
#5
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This has been discussed here before and is really a rhetorical in nature, however, I will ask it regardless:

Do you think the difference is the age of the drums (i.e. would a brand new Camco kit and a brand new DW kit be that disparate in tone), the age of the wood used to create the drums (old growth vs new growth timber) or a combination of the two?

DW gets a bad wrap here on a regular basis, but I don't own any vintage gear that compares to the manufacturing quality of my DW gear. I don't say that to disrespect any vintage gear, but we have all seen the interior finish drips, the painted interiors that may have been used to improve projection but I suspect it was done to cover imperfections in manufacture, broken hardware, non-level edges, etc. If the difference in tone comes from the use of old growth wood, the maturation process of the instrument or a combination of both, then you can't fault DW. Also, musical tastes and therefore drum design has changed, though we are seeing a return to a more vintage overall sound.

I have always found this kind of discussion interesting.

tnsquint
Very proud owner of a new Blaemire Snare 6.5 x 14 made by Jerry Jenkins "Drumjinx"
Posted on 12 years ago
#6
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Will all of these DW kits that don't compare now be "better" in 30-50 years when the shells have aged?

Posted on 12 years ago
#7
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From ec_curtis

Will all of these DW kits that don't compare now be "better" in 30-50 years when the shells have aged?

I reckon most of them will, but there is always the ones that don't now or never will, thats true of all wooden instruments.

Talking of drum design wandering through the ages with music taste and fashion, my Jazz series kit is the return to the good ole days. It has a very strong tone that although has a newer edge, it is becoming of a vintage-ish sound. I reckon 20-30 years of hard labour and that kit will be warmer than a Pizza oven. The kik drum is gorgeous, both heel up staccato and with a lovely subtle sub bass boom heel down. A friend of mine insists that I bring it to every gig I do with him.

The new Maple Mahogany kits sound amazing on-line, although I'm yet to see one up close. I think the company has turned a corner over the last 5 years or so.

40's Slingerland Radio King WMP
60's Ludwig Downbeat Silver Spark
70's Ludwig Super Classic White Marine
60's Gretsch RB Champaigne Spark
70's Rogers Big R Black
90's Sonor Hilite (Red maple)
00's DW Collectors Broken Glass
00's DW Jazz Series Tangerine Glass
10's DW Collectors (Acrylic) Matt Black Wrap
10's PDP Concept Wood Hoop kit (Maple)
Proud ambassador of the British Drum Company
Posted on 12 years ago
#8
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From tnsquint

This has been discussed here before and is really a rhetorical in nature, however, I will ask it regardless:Do you think the difference is the age of the drums (i.e. would a brand new Camco kit and a brand new DW kit be that disparate in tone), the age of the wood used to create the drums (old growth vs new growth timber) or a combination of the two? DW gets a bad wrap here on a regular basis, but I don't own any vintage gear that compares to the manufacturing quality of my DW gear. I don't say that to disrespect any vintage gear, but we have all seen the interior finish drips, the painted interiors that may have been used to improve projection but I suspect it was done to cover imperfections in manufacture, broken hardware, non-level edges, etc. If the difference in tone comes from the use of old growth wood, the maturation process of the instrument or a combination of both, then you can't fault DW. Also, musical tastes and therefore drum design has changed, though we are seeing a return to a more vintage overall sound. I have always found this kind of discussion interesting.

I don't think age affects the shells that much. In fact LA Camco drums sound very much like DWs but with a bit more warmth.

If you're looking for that Camco (Oaklawn) sound but you want a modern kit, definitely check out Fibes that were made in Austin. They sound very similar to the Camco sound IMHO but are becoming harder to come by.

1957 George Way BDP 26" concert bass drum
1959 George Way BDP 22/12/16 w/ 5.5x14
1959 George Way Green Sparkle 22/12/16 w/5.5x14
1961 George Way Blue Sparkle 20/12/15
1961 George Way Jelly Bean 20/12/14 w/4.5x14
1960’s Camco Oaklawn Champagne 20/12/14/16w/5x14
1971-73 Camco Chanute Walnut 24/14/18 w/5x14 COB
Posted on 12 years ago
#9
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From DolFan54

I don't think age affects the shells that much. In fact LA Camco drums sound very much like DWs but with a bit more warmth.

Sorry to disagree but rite here I very much do.

Aging is only 1 factor but it's a HUGE factor in the sound.

That's where that "warmth" is coming from.

Of course LA Camco's sound like DW with more warmth.

but it's not only the age. It's the age + all those years of being played.

the vibrations of resonating over all that time cause the wood to change, emphasizing the 1 fundamental note that is inherent in all drums(and wooden instruments for that matter.).

I'm not sure if you had a kit that was never/rarely played for like 50 years, if it would sound like a players kit. that's maybe a question for the gurus.

This is what makes all these old Star and crown and zim gar kits sound so good now.

They were the lowliest of the low in their day. Like westbury today.

That "vintage" sound can't be just made. If it could, lotsa companies would be producing it and "vintage" would be no big thing.

60's Sonor Teardrops & 70s Premier AMs
Sabian
Vic Firth
Remo/Evans

"unless it's vintage, it's just another wooden tube."
Posted on 12 years ago
#10
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