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[Kent] Curious about this old Kenmore, NY snare (w/pics)

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Thanks one and all... I'm going to put a 2 mil Diplomat on the bottom and swap the calf skin onto the batter. Will tune it up medium-low and I'll see what it sounds like! Much appreciated...

Aj

Posted on 12 years ago
#11
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From cooper

Kent strainers were their "achilles' heel" and designed to break. The good new is that 1960's-70's Rogers strainers will fit the existing holes without any alteration.

I don't feel this way Mark, if you adjust it correctly and understand how it works, they will NOT break. Yes, not the greatest strainer ever made, but it works!

Mouse

"Drummer's Paradise" home of Kent Drums. Kenmore, New York
Posted on 12 years ago
#12
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From Mouse

I don't feel this way Mark, if you adjust it correctly and understand how it works, they will NOT break. Yes, not the greatest strainer ever made, but it works!Mouse

Mouse, is of course the expert. But I do have the same snare, with a Remo fiberskyn head on the batter side and an Evans hazy 300 on the reso. It has the original very narrow snares. I use it with an acoustic singer/songwriter that I back. I often use hot rods, or Promark broomsticks and tune it kind of low. it has an earthy loose sound. Kind of nice if you need that sound.

1958 Gretsch Kit
1966 Kent Kit
1969 Ludwig Standard Kit
1970 Rogers Power Tone Kit
1970's Ludwig Vistalite Kit
1994 Yamaha Maple Custom
2010 Yamaha Maple Custom
28 assorted snares (including some real crap)
and 1 really nice K Zildjian Istanbul
Posted on 12 years ago
#13
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From Mouse

I don't feel this way Mark, if you adjust it correctly and understand how it works, they will NOT break. Yes, not the greatest strainer ever made, but it works!Mouse

I just don't care for them. I do understand how they work and how to adjust them correctly. I've owned one or two in my life. A Rogers strainer is a logical upgrade.

Posted on 12 years ago
#14
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From mcdrummer

I do have the same snare, with a Remo fiberskyn head on the batter side and an Evans hazy 300 on the reso. It has the original very narrow snares. I use it with an acoustic singer/songwriter that I back. I often use hot rods, or Promark broomsticks and tune it kind of low. it has an earthy loose sound. Kind of nice if you need that sound.

Sounds like you've got your Kent set up very similar to the advice I'm hearing about my snare... any chance you have any sound clips of you playing your Kent (with the singer/songwriter)?

Also I'm curious what your low tuning technique has been with this drum... I've never owned a single-tension snare before. Do you just tighten opposing lugs until it's "tight-but-loose" (and sounding cool)?

Posted on 12 years ago
#15
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