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My Sonor Beech Designer Kit and Review

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Hazelwood7
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My Sonor Beech Designer Kit and Review

Post by Hazelwood7 »

Hello Everyone,

I picked this up from my local drum shop Pocket Percussion. I am in the Philadelphia suburbs.

It’s an 2004 beech designer kit on in the following sizes.. 10x7, 12x8, 14x12, 16x16 floor tom, 22x18 bass drum and a matching 6.5x14 snare drum.
The shell thickness is 6.7mm for all the hanging toms and the snare drum. The bass drum and floor tom is 8.8mm. Even though the floor tom is that thick it blends in and it sounds like one cohesive set.

Since the early 2000’s I heard rumors that Sonor would make beech drums again. They showed up for a limited run in 2004 and 2005 US catalog and was only available in the US. I only saw 2 other kits on the Sonor Museum and this kit would be the third. I don’t know how many more of these kits are out there, but my guess is that these kits are very rare.

I spent a lot of time cleaning them up and they were in really nice shape and had all their plastic parts in shape and not broken. I have previously owned 3 maple light kits in the past and I have always have said they are the best sounding kits I have ever heard. It may be due to the slightly thicker shell 6.7mm vs 6mm and the heavier hardware. This is compared to my 6mm medium maple SQ2 kit. The designer kit was a bit more focused, louder and cleaner sounding than the sq2. The sq2 is more open sounding and not as loud. I sold my designer light kit for the sq2 but I still love the sq2 because the hardware is lighter, less stuff can break in it and the drums are just easier to move around from gig time gig.
The designer series has several problem parts that the sq2 fixed but luckily ST Drums makes replacement designer parts.

So the beech designer kit is still the same heavy kit as the maples. The sound is what I actually had envisioned in my mind what the beech drums would sound like. I have also owned an sq2 medium beech kit and a heavy beech Newport kit for comparison as well as my Phonics kit. I would say that beech designers are louder, focused and more punchy than the sq2 medium beech. Compared to the Newport kit, they are more open but share some of the same characteristic’s of being more focused, bit more powerful then the sq2 mediums. It is a bit of a hybrid between the two. The floor tom and bass drum are thicker than the 8mm heavy beech kit bass drum and floor tom at 8.8mm. The floor tom has a similar feel to the 8mm shell but with a bit more focus and I can tune it lower than the 8mm counterpart. The bass drum is not nearly as boomy as the 8mm counter part on the 22x18 Newport kit. It’s more focused and not nearly as boomy. It’s well controlled and a welcome change for me as I disliked it in the heavy beech Newport kit.

Overall it’s one of the best kits I have ever heard. I can say that for a lot of Sonor kits I owned so I slot it up there in sound with the designer maple light kit. I like to see and hear a kit in a lot of situations before I make a decision. The only thing I haven’t heard is what they sound like at a gig.

They are very much precision drums meaning that they are so focused, you better have your technique down. They sound great in jazz/fusion but also in rock/pop. This drums will never found fuzzy and that fits my playing style.

The snare drum is also a real gem. I owned and loved the sound of my medium beech sq2 snare and this designer snare is not different. It’s slightly more focused and aggressive but is still the same sound quality of my medium shell beech sq2 I foolishly sold.

Just an outstanding set of drums! The badges say maple lights as they never made beech badges. Hope I could shed some light on these rare drums.

Just an outstanding set of drums! The badges say maple lights as they never made beech badges. Hope I could shed some light on these rare drums.Image

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Scott_M
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Post by Scott_M »

I avoided ordering my Designers in Beech specifically because there was no beech badge...

Ordered the kit in Birch instead and (thankfully) never regretted it. But I am curious how that kit would have sounded with the thicker Beech shells instead... (12x10 tom, 14x14, 16x16 floors, 22x16 kick, and 14x6.5 snare with die cast).

Sq2 - Med Beech, Rosewood finish - 10/12/14/16/18/22 + 6.5x14
Performer - Wine Red, 12/13/16/22 + 6.5x14 (D456)
Phonic - Oak, 13/14/16/22

James Fullier III
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Post by James Fullier III »

Are you sure your floor is thicker than the toms?? That is weird if they changed the floor tom thickness to match the kick where as if they were mimicking the Designer Maple Light thicknesses (which it looks like they are on all other drums) it would of been reversed with the floor matching the toms in thickness.

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Hazelwood7
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Post by Hazelwood7 »

James,

Good question and I hope I can shed some light on this to my best thinking. The US beech designers were really a prelude to the drum design series, which morphed into the SQ2 line. Another kit I saw had graduated thickness from thin small sizes to thick large sizes. So people could choose want they wanted. I also took out my trusty caliper and measured the shell thickness to make sure it all checked out with the actual thickness of the shells. There was a a number of US players who lobbied to bring beech back. And one point Sonor said that beech was dead and never come back. They finally changed their minds and brought it back for a test run in the US.

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