How long do mesh drum heads last




















Some believe you need to replace them after every show, while others claim never to change them at all. In my experience, you should change your heads out every three to six months when gigging and touring. This length ensures decent-sounding drums at a relatively affordable cost. Always change out your drum heads before a recording session. After taking a beating from us drummers, heads tend to lose their responsiveness and tone.

Drum heads also become weaker, often breaking. Loss of tone is arguably the most significant contributing argument for changing drum heads. After a long duration six months to a year , the drum head becomes over-stretched and may begin to sound dissonant and out of tune, no matter how well you try.

Out of tune drums sound terrible and contain many harsh overtones that are annoying to the ear. The only exception to the rule would be practice heads. If you use your drums strictly for practice, you can use a set of drum heads until they break. Get yourself acquainted with playing, feel, and drum tuning. If you eventually feel curious about the tone and sound quality of your drums, start looking at drum heads.

You're right, the real feel mesh head is louder than the basic mesh head. If you're looking for middle-ground, something that is relatively silent, while still great to play, take a look at the drum-tec design mesh head! Ich war schon auf der Suche nach einer Alternative. Dann habe ich mir gedacht, ich starte mal den Versuch mit Real Feel Hab es ordentlich stramm gespannt!

I'd previously used the dual ply design heads and was more than happy with them Great product. I love the head I bought, an 8" to try them out first. They don't really feel close to Mylar heads to me, but the heaviness and three plies surely feel better on my hands, wrists and other joints than the black mesh heads that came on my Alesis Surge kit.

They also feel better than the white Alesis heads on my two Alesis Strike SE drums, a 14" snare and 12" tom. Needless to say, when I can afford it I'll be buying more to convert all my triggers to these or the pro models they have here Bottom line, reel feel are well worth the money and much easier on older hands and bodies like mine. Oh, and I forgot to say - the triggering is perfect and the hotspots are gone!

Hey, are you guys ever going to have 22" Real Feel heads in stock again? Asking for a friend. The net looks very reliable, and when stretched, it gives a good feeling when playing.

I really liked it! I installed it on a 14 " snare drum with a homemade 3-sensor system, also installed the RimNoise Eliminator and eventually got a great drum pad. So i bought a single Real Feel head just to try on my Alesis Strike snare I'd heard alot of people saying how good they are and even though I have gotten used to the trampoline effect and considering the original black Alesis head arent too bad anyway I was slightly dubious on the Drum Tec.

All I can say is that white heads look so much better and the actual feel really is very similar to an acoustic snare, completely worth the money.

I'm back here now buying more Real Feels for my 8' 10' and 12' now. I just put one of these on my 14" snare, replacing the Drums 3-ply it and all the rest of the drums in my kit came new with, and it is absolutely awesome. Night and day difference. THIS feels like a snare drum. The play and triggering are both remarkably superior now. In my research leading up to the decision to "go" having an e-kit built, I had seen a number of people speak very well of these drum heads and they are regarded by many to be the best you can get.

Having personal experience playing one now, I am fully impressed with them. I am so impressed in fact that I am just going to just go ahead and replace the Drums 3-ply heads my 8 toms came with as well -- I was going to wait to do this next year but I've been having some other head related anomalies especially on the 16" floor tom. I would definitely recommend these as first choice and not even waste your time or money with anything else.

I did buy a Design series head for my 22" bass on Marcus' advice. I bought a 14" head to replace my snare head on my stike pro kit and it's a big improvement from the standard alesis mesh head that was way too bouncey. After getting this one as a test I will be replacing my whole kit with drum tec heads.

Also delivered within 4 days which is good going with covid. Why did I not buy this sooner?. Absolutely top class. Forget the rest. This Reel Feel triple ply mesh heads is what you have to try out.

And a trust worthy company handles you order perfectly. Forums New posts Search forums. What's new New posts Latest activity. Log in Register. Search titles only. Search Advanced search…. New posts. Search forums. Log in. Install the app.

For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding. You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly. You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. How hard can I hit electronic drums??? Thread starter Keystone Start date Mar 2, Keystone Member. Its been a long while since I have shown my face around here..

Its not the greatest set, but its not supposed to be, I love my acoustic set and nothing can replace a good ol Ludwig Classic maple, but I can't take that to an apartment.. So my question is How hard can I hit the mesh heads? While I don't destroy drum heads or drums, I hit pretty hard, especially when I get into what I am playing.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000