What a great comparison, Joey. Thank you so much once again for taking your time to put this here for all of us the see/hear. You take care, my brooother.❤️🙏🎄❤️🙏🎄❤️
I play in a shed. It's a 10x14 insulated, heated/air conditioned. You can hear my kit really loud in the yard, down the road in my house..... Loud. Playing a Roland TD-27 you couldn't really hear anything unless you were maybe 25-50' outside of it. I got rid of the Roland kit and got some RTOM Black Holes and low volume cymbals. I would say about the same as the Roland kit. Volume wise very similar to the dB1 kit. My teacher has two of those kits so I have several hours playing those heads and cymbals. All good low volume solutions. I switched from the Roland to this because I wanted to play my drums and switch within a few minutes from LV to regular. My muscle memory was getting messed up going from e-kit to acoustic. I have enough problems to deal with trying to play. 😂😅 🎉🎉🎉 Nice job brother!
Your set up sounds legit, best of all you can still have triggers.. question: Do you still wear hearing protection with the LV cymbals… I have some coming in from back order and I’m trying to estimate the loudness
@@sinnombre5466 I have some low vol to practice with and they are quieter but still loud enough that i would wear hearing protection. They also sound thinner and high pitched so the hearing protection makes them sound bit better in a way. I dont think any of these is quiet enough for practising in an apartment or flat btw.
The mesh heads do make for quiter practice, but due to lack of sound, it just makes practicing not that much fun. I definitely recommend an e-kit for quite practice as you can wear earphones and have the sound of a drum kit that will kick up your quiet practice sessions.
@@joandelarosa6630 This would be a really good solution for small churches who want an acoustic kit look, but have good sound coming from the drums. Triggering the quiet cymbals would be the hard part.
@@ArkhBaegor I get 55-65db with rubber cymbals and up to 80 with low volume ones... its a different frequency tho, the low thock thock from the rubber might carry more thru. I think its possible to mute the low volume cymbals more with pads but then you gotta wonder sometimes whats the point in all this.
I might get one of the Evans db one heads for my snare I've been trying to get it to sound like a snare with mesh heads, both regular and low volume, and it just does not sound right. Probably something to do with it being a piccolo I'm using a really light reso too
I'm starting a new game. It'll be sooo fun! Let's guess how many times "brother" will be said the next video. My guess is 23. Enter your guess below. Winner gets a free drum stick from The Cowboy Drummer. Good luck.
Brothers & Sisters count: 21
What a great comparison, Joey. Thank you so much once again for taking your time to put this here for all of us the see/hear. You take care, my brooother.❤️🙏🎄❤️🙏🎄❤️
I play in a shed. It's a 10x14 insulated, heated/air conditioned.
You can hear my kit really loud in the yard, down the road in my house..... Loud.
Playing a Roland TD-27 you couldn't really hear anything unless you were maybe 25-50' outside of it.
I got rid of the Roland kit and got some RTOM Black Holes and low volume cymbals. I would say about the same as the Roland kit. Volume wise very similar to the dB1 kit. My teacher has two of those kits so I have several hours playing those heads and cymbals. All good low volume solutions.
I switched from the Roland to this because I wanted to play my drums and switch within a few minutes from LV to regular. My muscle memory was getting messed up going from e-kit to acoustic. I have enough problems to deal with trying to play.
😂😅
🎉🎉🎉
Nice job brother!
muscle memory and ekit are a trash combo for some reason brother 🤣
Your set up sounds legit, best of all you can still have triggers.. question: Do you still wear hearing protection with the LV cymbals… I have some coming in from back order and I’m trying to estimate the loudness
@sinnombre5466 Thanks. I wear headphones because I run BH triggers and everything goes through an EAD10.
@@sinnombre5466 I have some low vol to practice with and they are quieter but still loud enough that i would wear hearing protection. They also sound thinner and high pitched so the hearing protection makes them sound bit better in a way. I dont think any of these is quiet enough for practising in an apartment or flat btw.
Good insight on this test, definitely gonna get these heads for practice on a spare kit, youre awesome brotheerr and i appreciate the content chief!
I absolutely love the look of the sheer blue Pearl kit brother. I need to get my hands on one of those.
Great stuff! I'm usually here for the shenanigans. Thanks
The mesh heads do make for quiter practice, but due to lack of sound, it just makes practicing not that much fun. I definitely recommend an e-kit for quite practice as you can wear earphones and have the sound of a drum kit that will kick up your quiet practice sessions.
You could trigger these mesh heads so you have the feeling of an acoustic drum and the sound of an electric one.
@@joandelarosa6630 This would be a really good solution for small churches who want an acoustic kit look, but have good sound coming from the drums. Triggering the quiet cymbals would be the hard part.
The db0 needs more dampened cymbals an cuts too much away from the real sound. The db1 seems to be the best sounding compromise
great video
I wish you had also recorded normal edrums with this setup too, I'd love to go acoustic with low db drums, but I'm scared it'll be too loud.
Same here
The smaller size and rubber cymbal pads makes an ekit a lot quieter then this.
@@marv6424 Rubber cymbals are SO loud though 😭
@@ArkhBaegor I get 55-65db with rubber cymbals and up to 80 with low volume ones... its a different frequency tho, the low thock thock from the rubber might carry more thru. I think its possible to mute the low volume cymbals more with pads but then you gotta wonder sometimes whats the point in all this.
@@marv6424 I guess I'll have to find somewhere I can try them out.
If the reso head on the snare isnt mesh as well, it doesnt cut the snare sound by much.
I might get one of the Evans db one heads for my snare
I've been trying to get it to sound like a snare with mesh heads, both regular and low volume, and it just does not sound right.
Probably something to do with it being a piccolo
I'm using a really light reso too
Ever tried rtoms? Similar concept but they rubber rims that sit on your head rather than having to change heads altogether
And I ask myself, would this be better than an E-Kit?
it is for me brother!
Where did you find db 0 heads please tell me
BROTHER
Cool comparison. You keep a pretty stiff left wrist.
I have a question cowboy drummer. Do you know seven days by sting?
DB-0 ALL THE WAY😂😂😂
I'm starting a new game. It'll be sooo fun! Let's guess how many times "brother" will be said the next video. My guess is 23. Enter your guess below. Winner gets a free drum stick from The Cowboy Drummer. Good luck.
You really shouldn’t use a SM 57 as an overhead.
I didn’t brother