I started this project for three reasons 1. Quiet drums so I could play at night time 2. The fun of building an edrum set and 3. The cost of edrums they can cost thousands of pounds.
My drum instruction kit is a Roland and I do not like playing it, the rubber cymbals, marmalade has more rebound, however that poor response does improve my stick control when I play my own set.
My Snare and Toms are home made with the piezo foam cone and metal bracketry system (There is a post with pictures), the cymbals were diy acrylic heat/vacuum formed, although now I have used real cymbals deadened with the lead bitumen coating strip used for roofs,why? they look good dynamics are brilliant and easy to convert. I will post a how-to with pictures soon.
I use AD2 perfect, and of course megadrum. USB connection through a SCARLETT SOLO, excellent for the latency.
I did buy a Yamaha 155 and 135 hi hat but found the dynamics lacking especially on the HI HAT. My own hi hat is the brass cymbals they look standard and the control is through a sliding potentiometer attached to the pedal
Set up is a bit of a fiddle but this helped so much
I found this on another forum written by our esteemed colleague Ignotus whom I trust will not mind me re-posting it here:
Make sure you have "Autoload Conf" set to 'yes' (and save the config); it's at the start of the menu. This will make sure the module loads up the last saved configuration. Don't panic. Take it one pad at a time (don't try to do several at the same time), get the hang of it, and then move on to other similar pads - e.g. do the snare and then move on to the toms; then do a cymbal, followed by the rest. Also, don't just dial in settings randomly without knowing what you're doing, you'll drive yourself insane.
(Here you have several posts explaining how to set up a few different types of pads: view...php?f=3&t=1968)
editors note please read the other posts in the forum about cooling "HOT PADS" this is important
The (slightly different) way I go about setting a mesh pad is this:
1.- Set HighLevel Auto to 'yes' and whack the pad hard 10 times. Look at the number you get in 'HighLevel'. If it's between 500 and 1000 move to step 2. If it's below 500, raise gain and repeat the process. If it's above 1000, reduce gain and repeat the process. Ideally it should be around 800-900 but if it's at around 500 it's still fine.
2.- Reduce Threshold until the pad starts auto-triggering. Raise it by 2.
3.- Set Retrigger to 1 and Dyntime and Dynlevel to 0. You'll probably get loads of double triggers. Raise Dyntime to 24 and then raise Dynlevel one number at a time until double triggers go away. Don't go higher than 4 or 5 (I find it starts missing hits if higher than 5, YMMV). If you still get double triggering start raising Retrigger until they go away.
The pad should now be triggering fairly decently. Fine-tuning involves tweaking the above parameters, there's not much else to it apart from choosing a curve that suits the dynamics you want.
Thanks again ignotus
Happy playing