So I'm looking into an acoustic drum set, I have an electric kit now that I play in the garage, but it's not scratching that itch anymore. So my only real option is to pick up an outdoor shed and set up my back yard.Any advice on this? Has anyone done this? How do the shells take the temps / humidity?
4/6/2010 8:17:46 PM
i think the lack of climate control and moisture/humidity in a shed cant be good for your set
4/6/2010 10:50:31 PM
Sounds like a bad idea for the drums.
4/6/2010 11:18:11 PM
how about you move your bed into the shed and put the drums in your room. problem solved
4/6/2010 11:20:28 PM
^^^
4/6/2010 11:33:41 PM
why not in the house?
4/6/2010 11:44:42 PM
i hope you don't have any neighbors
4/7/2010 12:22:09 AM
I never thought I'd say this, but boner jams is right.
4/7/2010 12:32:41 AM
unless it is a sub $200 set that is a piece of crap, a shed is a terrible idea.
4/7/2010 1:16:04 AM
4/7/2010 6:30:14 AM
http://www.google.com/search?q=man+cave
4/7/2010 8:28:54 AM
^^ I'm in a similar situation. between the wife and the kid, I rarely get the opportunity to crank up my guitar amp and rock the fuck out.
4/7/2010 8:37:23 AM
Setting it up outside in a shed would be a horrible idea for a number of reasons -- many of which have already been posted.On top of that, its a very d-bagish move... "My wife doesn't want me to bother her with the noise, so I want to set up a shed outside and bother my neighbors instead"Regardless of whether your neighbors are "pretty cool" or not, I'm sure you would annoy the crap out of them in a fairly short period of time. Just my 2cents.
4/7/2010 9:20:04 AM
Someone near our neighborhood plays drums for like 3 hours a night 4 nights a week.Seems like it, anyways.
4/7/2010 9:20:24 AM
Sometimes I can hear the drummers from the Athens Dr. high school band practicing when I get home from work. Usually it inspires me to go play my drums for like three hours. This happens approximately four nights a week.[Edited on April 7, 2010 at 9:42 AM. Reason : l]
4/7/2010 9:42:11 AM
back at my old house, the guy 2 houses down played his drums in his garage every few nights. we all wanted to kill him. don't be that guy....
4/7/2010 10:06:40 AM
4/7/2010 10:47:22 AM
oh, so you'd only be playing your drums when the sun is out and/or on the weekends?never past sundown?that's a totally different story, and your neighbors would have no reason to hate you
4/7/2010 10:50:01 AM
best thing to do as a drummer is buy a house with a basement and put up a bunch of sound attenuators and youre golden. Unfortunately that limits your house choice a lot in this area hah.
4/7/2010 11:07:04 AM
Definitely not trying to troll you, but you specifically asked:
4/7/2010 11:07:58 AM
If you were already considering buying/building a shed, you could build a sound attenuated drum room to keep in your house using the same concept as a vocal booth that are used in studios. Some foam insulated metal panels lined with the pyramidal acoustic absorption foam. You're just going to want to make sure you build it over a register in your house or figure out a way to stub some AC into the box/room if you keep this in your garageVocal booth that this guy built for $1000.I know that seems like a lot of space, but if you are already housing the drum setup open in the house/garage it wouldn't be a ton more room[Edited on April 7, 2010 at 11:19 AM. Reason : ]
4/7/2010 11:10:49 AM
4/7/2010 11:29:59 AM
Yea I agree. I was just saying that because it sounded like he was trying to be able to "get more time" than having to cut off at 9 or whatever.Along with that, my band has practiced in a bonus room above a garage in a subdivision for about 7 years and yea, during the day, you don't hear it except for maybe the neighbors yard outside directly next door on the garage side. I've never been in their house but I bet you can't hear it that well at all. We have always stopped at 10:00pm and never received a complaint.
4/7/2010 11:34:32 AM