@@bread-gz3rl You can see a Cashies sticker on the first drill at 3:20, and then you can see part of the yellow hoopy bit from their logo on the torn sticker at 6:28 - Not DEFINITELY a mostly-destroyed Cashies sticker, but given who we're dealing with, we can make a fair assumption.
I wanna see you do a full snare or tom head replacement speedrun with the impact driver pit-stop style. How fast can you remove old heads, put on new heads, then put the drum back into place and play a groove.
My first drums in high school had kind of a funky floor tom head, I didn't know why. Eventually I tried to replace it, and was told that the shells were so old, they no longer made heads in those sizes, so I'd have to get one custom made (which I couldn't afford.) Apparently the previous owner tried to get around this by going a size too small, cutting the rim of the head, and using CAULK to permanently secure it to the rim, thus solving the mystery of the funky floor tom head.
And the reality is that it's likely one of those vintage Ludwig / Sonor things where the shells are purposely slightly undersized and a 14" inch floor tom is like 13.something, but you're still supposed to use a 14" head.
When the drill failed, I said out loud, "you need an impact driver", and then I was positively giddy when you actually got one out. Thanks for answering a question I never knew I had. For Science!
It takes a special kind of man to be so passionate about collecting drums that he has all these vintage drums and gear just lying around, but still be willing to take an impact driver to them just to find out what happens. God bless you, Wade. Never change.
Watching this vid was like experiencing a fever dream with a fever of 103 degrees. The rampant chuckle, impact driver sound, and then quick taps with the drumstick. I felt like I was going looney toons. Keep up the great content Wade!
An Aussie screaming at the top of his lungs while actively destroying drumheads is something I never would've guessed I'd be willing to watch. I love it
Bro, Im not even kidding. Despite this (and a bunch of other videos) being made for entertainment, It's actually super helpful to know when I'm behind the counter working at the music store.
Better crappy drum keys than *no* drum keys! I went to a jam night some time ago and ended up being the drummer for most of the night. And while it was mostly fun too, I was wishing the whole time I would've brought a drum key to be able to properly adjust the kick pedal on that e-kit, of which the beater was only a few centimetres away from the skin, and I was constantly getting cramps in my leg 🙄
I’ve actually (accidentally) done this on a snare drum. I had a Ludwig accent 6.5” and for some reason fell in love with really thick 2 ply heads on it, but you had to really crank it. All the lugs just blew out like that eventually lol Also just a side thing, fun fact I guess, the reason Evan’s heads don’t pop like that is because the collar design
Evans uses an epoxy resin the same as Remo in an aluminum hoop. What you’re referring to is a COLLAR LOCK hoop which are made of steel. Many cheaper heads use a collar lock and even high quality brands like Aquarian.
When I was marching drum corps, we used to do a thing called "double hooping" to get higher tension out of the 6" tenor drums. We would cut the hoop off of a broken 6" head and put the hoop over a new head to get an extra 1/4" of tension out of the lug screws. Needless to say we broke a LOT of 6" heads trying to get the drums tuned that high.
We found out how far the Pearl marching snares can go one year when they decided to put Falam (made with Kevlar) heads on them. These snares were only a year old at the time. They were Ferrari red with the full-length chrome lugs, I think they were the Export Series? I'm pretty sure they weren't designed for those heads. The guys kept cranking and cranking on the lugs, enjoying the high-pitched pop that the snare made until the snare shell started collapsing under the bearing edge. I think we lost 2-3 snares that way. This was back in 1990-1991.
When the drill didn't work, I jokingly thought to myself - "ah fuck it bud, just give er a coupl'ah uggah duggahs and that'll get er done." But lmfao, he actually pulled out the impact driver. I've got it paused to type this but I'm so excited to see this.
Yo I love all of your vids that includes garbage time, dankpods they are so good and this one was good to keep on making content you are one of the most random (in a good way) and it gives you a sighn of relief that I still have hope in humanity. Love your content have a good day
I guess it's good engineering in a way? The weakest link is a part that can be fixed (relatively) easily and cheaply (just get the headless tension rods out with pliers)
I did this back in the 80's. I found a $10 garage sale snare. I wanted to tighten it like a timbale, but the threads were dirty and stiff. I put a drum key in a vice, then used the size of the snare as the leverage to turn the tension rod. In my case, the lug housing itself cracked. I'm very surprised you has to resort to an impact gun. I was able to crack the housing just with the leverage of turning the drum on a fixed drum key.
Yeah they're big leap in drum tuning tech, imo! Pretty expensive, but I think reasonably so. I'm wondering about getting a hardware conversion kit but I might wait for a cheaper alternative to hopefully come out soon.
That single point tuning system is too niche for modern drums. The biggest downfall is the inability to have independent head tuning. Plus I wouldn’t want to be anywhere near one of those kits when a wire decides to snap. No thanks! A novelty at best and nothing more than a curiosity for the majority of drummers.
@@Assimilator702 It's just the first iteration! I wouldn't be surprised if individual head systems come out soon. And the cables aren't under that much tension and seem quite strong.
In high school I played on the snare line, and our drum coach would crank the piss out of the drums - I think he used a socket wrench. If I recall right, we had Yamaha snares with die cast hoops and one piece tension lugs that spanned the shell length. With Remo CS heads, the mylar would pull out of the glue, leaving the glue in the rims. Around that time, Remo first came out with their Falam heads (kevlar laminate - shows how old I am!), which we switched to. Those heads are pretty much indestructible. So, as they were cranked, the lugs themselves would start to split. I think once we broke a hoop (the die cast ones don't really deform). I don't recall the tension rods breaking, though. I heard rumors that, if cranked enough and if the lugs held, the shell itself could fold using falams.
One time I was changing heads on a marching quad and since I’m a dumb ass I was turning the wrong way. I didn’t realize until one of the casings on the lugs popped off. Fortunately I had an extra drum with that same casing laying around that I replaced it with.
Well that was fun. As a music store repairman for 36 years, I have real world experience with such drums. A lot of them. I find that OVER TIME, even half the tension you applied to these will destroy the lug inserts and then the lug casings. Often snare drums only have 6 or maybe 8 lugs, that means you cannot tension it beyond medium, which some kids will do in the band room. Over time the casings give out and the stubs going thru the shell will actually stress out and distort or shear off. The inserts strip easily. The hoops are fine. But sometimes the hoop to head to shell fit is so bad, the head will pull up under the hoop and there is nothing to do other than to try and keep perfect balance on the rods and only med tension will work. No matter the heads, there are some drums that are just junk. I have found this will cheaper Timbales as well. I did see a crushed drum shell (Slingerland TDR) back in the 80's that had a Kevlar head on it. 12 lugs cranked very tight! So the week link became the drum shell which buckled inward and the upper bearing edge. Oh this happens to Yamaha Power Lite as well, since they are NEVER designed to use a Falam head or the like. They will just get killed. !!! Oh the pain when I see that.
I took one of those $40 soup can snares, removed the bottom, put a half cut snare resting on the head, which is power drilled as tight as it can go. I’m the drummer in a grind band so it sounds good. Makes the St. Anger snare sound like your drum key at 2:50
I had a hand-me-down snare that came with a kevlar head, and that wouldn't ever break. I eventually tightened it down until the lugs broke and were free floating against the side of the snare, but still holding tension between the top and bottom head. I didn't know better at the time.
3:10 lol! you can also just buy an 8 point socket. 8 points are still made in a few sizes because small engine oil drain plugs are often still 4 sided. some other things still rock 4 sided lugs or nuts too (like drums). i have a full 8 point socket set
My 18" still has the original EC-2 from around 2005/6 .. It still sound great, I think, but yeah . I definitely get nostalgic for those times of my music career when I see the old logo and silver ring. Edit - I forgot about drying glue.. guess I'll buy a spare
You know Wade’s a car guy because as soon as he started using an impact, he started calling the tension rods “lugs.” It’s almost like he has a car channel or something.
Used to destroy lugs with kevlar marching heads on non-free floating marching snares. School didn't have the money for new drums but we wanted that free floater sound so we just cranked them down...eventually we blew them all out. Got really good at replacing those lugs...
I love the fact that we actually got four different failure modes on a drum with just five lugs and then the rock solid 6 snapped heads on the Export Series, fucking amazing! Also, not a single Soulja Boy reference in the entire video? Mate you've got more restraint in ya than I ever will xD
I love the fact that both of the drills are from cashies
He's keepin it real with 25 dollar cashies drills, you love to see it
Some things never change.
Sadly, it does not appear that they are powered by the Ominous Bosch Cubes from Cashies.
Don't see any cashies stickers, just lower grade tools then brushed ryobi.
@@bread-gz3rl You can see a Cashies sticker on the first drill at 3:20, and then you can see part of the yellow hoopy bit from their logo on the torn sticker at 6:28 - Not DEFINITELY a mostly-destroyed Cashies sticker, but given who we're dealing with, we can make a fair assumption.
I knew as soon as he got out the impact driver that we were going to be getting some PREMIUM maniacal laughter this episode. I wasn't disappointed.
Almost as good as the donkey van death smoke
"That's why I'm here"
Dat izzet logo
Almost as good as when he blows up cheap knockoff bootleg earphones!
I knew it rossmallo as soon as the impact driver comes out
I straight up knew a guy that loved having a snare drum tuned so high it buckled the shell
I hate how weird but cool it sounded
You never know how St Anger will reveal himself
im addicted to that snare sound.
Haha yeah my band’s drummer does this as well. Actually somewhat common for really extreme metal bands
Bro was a mincecore drummer
Same.
I love how pingy snares can get.
I wanna see you do a full snare or tom head replacement speedrun with the impact driver pit-stop style. How fast can you remove old heads, put on new heads, then put the drum back into place and play a groove.
"Danny Ricciardo, Danny Ricciardo!"
Perfect way to make your drums sound like garbage and ruin fresh heads
Fully in favor of this. Full send, as the kids say!
Bono, my drum heads are gone
@@cornbased54 yeaaaah baby, that's the idea
'Fun' fact, Those square drum keys also fit some household radiators, so you can use them to bleed your heating system too 👍
With the impact gun, until something happens
household radiators lmfao
@@williamcampbell9859 Central heating and air FTW USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA USA
@@BarrackObamna unironic thanks, Obama
My first drums in high school had kind of a funky floor tom head, I didn't know why. Eventually I tried to replace it, and was told that the shells were so old, they no longer made heads in those sizes, so I'd have to get one custom made (which I couldn't afford.) Apparently the previous owner tried to get around this by going a size too small, cutting the rim of the head, and using CAULK to permanently secure it to the rim, thus solving the mystery of the funky floor tom head.
And the reality is that it's likely one of those vintage Ludwig / Sonor things where the shells are purposely slightly undersized and a 14" inch floor tom is like 13.something, but you're still supposed to use a 14" head.
@@EversonBernardes Could've been! Shame I didn't know it at the time.
I love how you had the drill on the fastest speed and highest torque setting. No easing it in, just immediate wrist snapping.
I feel like Wade’s personality is just “Full send” and I love it.
When the drill failed, I said out loud, "you need an impact driver", and then I was positively giddy when you actually got one out. Thanks for answering a question I never knew I had. For Science!
It takes a special kind of man to be so passionate about collecting drums that he has all these vintage drums and gear just lying around, but still be willing to take an impact driver to them just to find out what happens.
God bless you, Wade. Never change.
I was half expecting wade’s next drum upload to be a drummer game in VR, which honestly would’ve been perfect
I wouldn’t be surprised if he’s avoiding them, or tried them and hates them lmao
to me the only good drum game is paradiddle.
Never thought I’d see the day Wade recreate the St. Anger snare sound
I would like to see Wade doing a drum cover of Frantic or St. Anger in the stream.
Obviously with drums tuned similarly like this. :D
OHHH.... So Lars just lost a bet with his drum tech, then. Now it makes sense!
As a drummer, i have always thought about this whenever I tune or replace my drum heads, thanks for taking one for the team!
8:02 might be a contender for “best noise” across all 3 channels
Sounds like you're about to record brutal slamming death metal. Perfect.
When the guy at the auto shop who puts on your tires is also your drum tech
Secretly every drummer wants to absolutely destroy a kit
Its similar to how every car owner has a small temptation in the back of their head to wreck their car, just to see what happens.
Keith Moon comes to mind as a Drum Destroyer
@@JohnLennon99791 or tré from green day
Watching this vid was like experiencing a fever dream with a fever of 103 degrees. The rampant chuckle, impact driver sound, and then quick taps with the drumstick. I felt like I was going looney toons.
Keep up the great content Wade!
An Aussie screaming at the top of his lungs while actively destroying drumheads is something I never would've guessed I'd be willing to watch.
I love it
Me and my girlfriend were just talking about this subject, thank you for enlightening us both mate
Bro, Im not even kidding. Despite this (and a bunch of other videos) being made for entertainment, It's actually super helpful to know when I'm behind the counter working at the music store.
The nice drum got to the point where it sounded like Lars Ulrich’s snare in St.Anger
Love how on the cheap one a different part broke each time but on the nice one it was snapped heads all around.
Better crappy drum keys than *no* drum keys! I went to a jam night some time ago and ended up being the drummer for most of the night. And while it was mostly fun too, I was wishing the whole time I would've brought a drum key to be able to properly adjust the kick pedal on that e-kit, of which the beater was only a few centimetres away from the skin, and I was constantly getting cramps in my leg 🙄
if only you had the survival key
I’ve actually (accidentally) done this on a snare drum. I had a Ludwig accent 6.5” and for some reason fell in love with really thick 2 ply heads on it, but you had to really crank it. All the lugs just blew out like that eventually lol
Also just a side thing, fun fact I guess, the reason Evan’s heads don’t pop like that is because the collar design
Evans uses an epoxy resin the same as Remo in an aluminum hoop. What you’re referring to is a COLLAR LOCK hoop which are made of steel. Many cheaper heads use a collar lock and even high quality brands like Aquarian.
I love how everything that Wade owns has a cashies sticker on it
When I was marching drum corps, we used to do a thing called "double hooping" to get higher tension out of the 6" tenor drums. We would cut the hoop off of a broken 6" head and put the hoop over a new head to get an extra 1/4" of tension out of the lug screws. Needless to say we broke a LOT of 6" heads trying to get the drums tuned that high.
7:20 love the fact the drill is from chash converters
Morality of the story: Sometimes to need unscrew something, you just need do screw it to much until it breaks.
Buffer overflow error
@@kaitlyn__L its more like integer overflow in this case
@@bsahin7110 can’t overflow a float, over/underflow is always integer :p
I want more videos of experiments, keep it up Wade!
maniac laughter drilling a drum
u got a new subscriber
The trash can drum sound is unironically great. Kind Eyes and LANDMVRKS do it perfectly
The hardware on that Pearl is still sturdier than the engine mount in Tony
You ever just tune a drum so hard that little metal shavings start flying everywhere?
i sure hope that doesn't happen to me
Finally the crossover we all need; The Drum Thing and Torque Test Channel 🤣
When wade goes maniacal laughter, you know ur gonna have a gd time.
We found out how far the Pearl marching snares can go one year when they decided to put Falam (made with Kevlar) heads on them. These snares were only a year old at the time. They were Ferrari red with the full-length chrome lugs, I think they were the Export Series? I'm pretty sure they weren't designed for those heads. The guys kept cranking and cranking on the lugs, enjoying the high-pitched pop that the snare made until the snare shell started collapsing under the bearing edge. I think we lost 2-3 snares that way. This was back in 1990-1991.
I love the cashies sticker on the impact
Not stolen at all!
When the drill didn't work, I jokingly thought to myself - "ah fuck it bud, just give er a coupl'ah uggah duggahs and that'll get er done." But lmfao, he actually pulled out the impact driver. I've got it paused to type this but I'm so excited to see this.
This is how St Anger drums were recorded
Yo I love all of your vids that includes garbage time, dankpods they are so good and this one was good to keep on making content you are one of the most random (in a good way) and it gives you a sighn of relief that I still have hope in humanity. Love your content have a good day
I like how the nice one sounded like a marching drum at max tightness
It's comforting to know that the part that fails is the easiest thing to replace
Gotta love how Dank's drill isn't just any old Ozito, but it's an Ozito that he bought from Cashies.
you should do this with marching drums since they already get so tight, im curious to see how they react to overtightening
thats a tight boi
That's what the priest said
what you mean by that
That's what your Dad said last night
"that's getting marching snare tight"
as someone in the marching arts- having our craft recognized by the drumset community brings a warm feeling :>
This is extremely unscientific science and I love it
Breaking news: Australian man creates self sustaining fusion reaction by thightening drums
I guess it's good engineering in a way? The weakest link is a part that can be fixed (relatively) easily and cheaply (just get the headless tension rods out with pliers)
I have never ever played drums but I just watch this guy cause he's hilarious
I did this back in the 80's. I found a $10 garage sale snare. I wanted to tighten it like a timbale, but the threads were dirty and stiff. I put a drum key in a vice, then used the size of the snare as the leverage to turn the tension rod. In my case, the lug housing itself cracked. I'm very surprised you has to resort to an impact gun. I was able to crack the housing just with the leverage of turning the drum on a fixed drum key.
Have you looked at the WTS drums? Might be right in your alley of weirdness in drums! Love the vids👍🏻
They're cool but you have to buy specific heads if you want different tuning between heads
@@sirdrum-a-lot don’t you normally buy different batter and reso heads anyways? Just find a pair that work and they’ll always work for you
Yeah they're big leap in drum tuning tech, imo! Pretty expensive, but I think reasonably so. I'm wondering about getting a hardware conversion kit but I might wait for a cheaper alternative to hopefully come out soon.
That single point tuning system is too niche for modern drums. The biggest downfall is the inability to have independent head tuning. Plus I wouldn’t want to be anywhere near one of those kits when a wire decides to snap. No thanks! A novelty at best and nothing more than a curiosity for the majority of drummers.
@@Assimilator702 It's just the first iteration! I wouldn't be surprised if individual head systems come out soon. And the cables aren't under that much tension and seem quite strong.
Dawg this channel is half the reason I even open UA-cam. Much love
In high school I played on the snare line, and our drum coach would crank the piss out of the drums - I think he used a socket wrench. If I recall right, we had Yamaha snares with die cast hoops and one piece tension lugs that spanned the shell length. With Remo CS heads, the mylar would pull out of the glue, leaving the glue in the rims. Around that time, Remo first came out with their Falam heads (kevlar laminate - shows how old I am!), which we switched to. Those heads are pretty much indestructible. So, as they were cranked, the lugs themselves would start to split. I think once we broke a hoop (the die cast ones don't really deform). I don't recall the tension rods breaking, though.
I heard rumors that, if cranked enough and if the lugs held, the shell itself could fold using falams.
Why do I have a feeling these drums will still somehow see their way to the livestream 😂
Noooo! Not the Exports! I love the bloody finger cameo at ~ 7:18, don't think we don't appreciate the sacrifices you make for us.
One time I was changing heads on a marching quad and since I’m a dumb ass I was turning the wrong way. I didn’t realize until one of the casings on the lugs popped off. Fortunately I had an extra drum with that same casing laying around that I replaced it with.
Bless your heart for doing these things to your drums that I couldnt even dream of attempting
I'm not even a drum person but seeing the Pearl in the opening... it hurts, man, it hurts
Love that the Cashies price tag is even on his drills
Imagine strolling down the streets and overhearing someone laughing madly with a screwdriver
Well that was fun. As a music store repairman for 36 years, I have real world experience with such drums. A lot of them. I find that OVER TIME, even half the tension you applied to these will destroy the lug inserts and then the lug casings. Often snare drums only have 6 or maybe 8 lugs, that means you cannot tension it beyond medium, which some kids will do in the band room. Over time the casings give out and the stubs going thru the shell will actually stress out and distort or shear off. The inserts strip easily. The hoops are fine. But sometimes the hoop to head to shell fit is so bad, the head will pull up under the hoop and there is nothing to do other than to try and keep perfect balance on the rods and only med tension will work. No matter the heads, there are some drums that are just junk. I have found this will cheaper Timbales as well. I did see a crushed drum shell (Slingerland TDR) back in the 80's that had a Kevlar head on it. 12 lugs cranked very tight! So the week link became the drum shell which buckled inward and the upper bearing edge. Oh this happens to Yamaha Power Lite as well, since they are NEVER designed to use a Falam head or the like. They will just get killed. !!! Oh the pain when I see that.
I play this game everyday for my snare sound lmfao
I’m amazed by how little the fancy drum’s hoop deformed. Some fabulous engineering on display
Drum content we NEED. hahahaha I love this.,
I really enjoyed how excited you were in this video ^^ You turned into an absolute maniac and I loved it
I took one of those $40 soup can snares, removed the bottom, put a half cut snare resting on the head, which is power drilled as tight as it can go. I’m the drummer in a grind band so it sounds good. Makes the St. Anger snare sound like your drum key at 2:50
This is my first video here. Subscribed immediately as I saw the impact driver😂😂😂
1:57 same here, I remember school music classes having drums with tan versions of those heads
I love the the cashies logo on the bottom of the drills.
Where you can find your dreams.
Living his best life, in the corner of a warehouse shredding drum heads and cackling like a loon..
FR 😂😂😂
How Metallica tuned their drums for St. Anger
I had a hand-me-down snare that came with a kevlar head, and that wouldn't ever break. I eventually tightened it down until the lugs broke and were free floating against the side of the snare, but still holding tension between the top and bottom head. I didn't know better at the time.
Man’s had me at “hayyy m8 how ya goin’”
The Cashie Drill and Impact made my day more than anything else in this video
3:10 lol! you can also just buy an 8 point socket. 8 points are still made in a few sizes because small engine oil drain plugs are often still 4 sided. some other things still rock 4 sided lugs or nuts too (like drums). i have a full 8 point socket set
All videos of yours have the perfect amount of cursed ty
Dude really awesome video, the last drum hoop starting popping off 🤯
Very cool and fun. Thanks bud for the entertainment
Been giggingwith the same export kit since 2006 and its got some battle scars but it sounds great and it gets the job done
What's worse than a 12" tom with 5 lugs? A 16" floor tom with 5 lugs. Please ruin a 5-lug, 16" floor tom. hahahaha
oh hey didn't expect to see you here
@@ZonkedLeomana New year, new social platform. 😂❤️
My 18" still has the original EC-2 from around 2005/6 .. It still sound great, I think, but yeah . I definitely get nostalgic for those times of my music career when I see the old logo and silver ring.
Edit - I forgot about drying glue.. guess I'll buy a spare
The best part of this was just you laughing in hysterics, that is so good xD
7:20 love how everything you get is from cashies
You know Wade’s a car guy because as soon as he started using an impact, he started calling the tension rods “lugs.” It’s almost like he has a car channel or something.
Before clicking on the video I already knew it was dankpods…
my clicks got me here the second the vid was released im hyped!
Used to destroy lugs with kevlar marching heads on non-free floating marching snares. School didn't have the money for new drums but we wanted that free floater sound so we just cranked them down...eventually we blew them all out. Got really good at replacing those lugs...
Those maniacal giggles are why I tune in. 11/10
Wow, what a nice time saving hack to get your drum heads off. I will use method from now on
Hearing the fundamental shell tone underneath an impact wrench is insane
This video is so chaotic I never laughed so hard in my life from a drum video
I love the fact that we actually got four different failure modes on a drum with just five lugs and then the rock solid 6 snapped heads on the Export Series, fucking amazing!
Also, not a single Soulja Boy reference in the entire video? Mate you've got more restraint in ya than I ever will xD
Finally someone did this!
I love my gold badge pearl exports, such a fun kit to play
This video was fun, do this with die cast hoops and high quality lugs, lug nuts, and tension rods next
While other drummers cry to death from these videos, my guy has the best fun of his life destreying his export series
It's amazing how sturdy those POS drums are!
Oh man I never knew a snuff movie on drums could make me feel so uneasy and gleeful at the same time.
There's something fantastic about the impact driver GRGRGRGRGing as the drum creaks and crunches.