I like the Slingerland TDR strainer.
Steve
I like the Slingerland TDR strainer.
Steve
+1 For the TDR.I have one on my brass Spitfire.Very reliable and smooth.I also like the P-83.I have them on my supra,jazzfest and acrolote.Lots of milage,and still going strong.
Steve B
I also like the TDR. I have several and they're all smooth. I'm obviously more concerned with how they function, but someone apparently took the time to make them look nice as well.
Al
Trick GS-007 Multi-Step. About as far from vintage as you can get but hands down the best I've used.
My least favorite strainer is the one on the wrong drum with the extra holes.In use I'm fond of the P-83. It's strong enough, adjustable enough, light enough, and simple enough. Ludwig always excelled at hitting that sweet spot of hardware that was made to stand up to normal use, but before you start getting too heavy/complicated/expensive. I still say their later rail, captive eyebolt mounts, and telescoping arc spurs are all that I need drum hardware to be.
Great post, my sentiments exactly!
I have a new(isn) Gretsch snare and I really like the strainer. Its the type with just a simple lever where the strainer usually is with the control knob on the buttplate side. I don't know what its called but it works great for me.
This is not an effort to be controversial but after years of being told to avoid them like the plague I bought a Radio King snare with a clamshell strainer, I now have two, and I love them, a bit fiddly to set up at first but I like the fact that it has a loose and a tight setting, they work for me.
As for the best, the old three point takes some beating, smooth and simple.
I personally like the TRD. Why Slingerland didn't make this their standard model, I'll never know.
I am also a big fan of the P83. It has the same qualities as the TRD: simple, smooth and bullet proof.
This is not an effort to be controversial but after years of being told to avoid them like the plague I bought a Radio King snare with a clamshell strainer, I now have two, and I love them, a bit fiddly to set up at first but I like the fact that it has a loose and a tight setting, they work for me.As for the best, the old three point takes some beating, smooth and simple.
There's always 1 clam in every bunch. :D I'm a big fan of the Clamshell strainer too. Once you understand how it works it's really a thing of beauty. They do get a bad rap though. The stamped brass body can flex and bend under severe tension. They are not the best by my favorite by far. I never had a 3 point but hope to have one and the snare with it someday!! I hear those are smooth as silk. The Zoomatic is also good as is the Rogers on the dyna and powertone. All rock solid.
My Clamshell........... BTW I know the stick chopper hoopss are not correct. But I LOVE stick chopper hoops!!! I have the original stick savers tucked away that go with......
Fibes SFT. Simpler and maybe not as finicky as the Rogers Dyna set-up. A distant second would be the TDR (and yes, it would have made a good standard for the entire line!). For everyday snares, though, either the Slingerland Rapid (now getting hard to find) or the ubiquitious Ludwig P-85 (83?) will work nicely. But the SFT is the most sensitive of all the non 'multi-strand' and dual adjustable snare systems.
P-83 is my number one. I also love the vintage George Way 'clock-face' flip-strainer.
[IMG]http://i1143.photobucket.com/albums/n632/PurdieShuffle/geoway_zps6d9fa09a.jpg[/IMG]
John
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