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A conventional three-piece kit consists of a bass drum, snare drum (14" diameter), hi-hat (12–14"), hanging tom (12 x 8-9" depth), and a suspended 14"–18" cymbal, the latter two mounted on the bass drum. These kits were most common in the 1950s and 1960s. [31] It is a common configuration for children.
Drum hardware is the set of parts of a drum or drum kit that are used to tension, position, and otherwise support the instruments themselves. Occasionally, the hardware is used percussively as well, the most common example being a rim shot .
Percussion instruments that are commonly part of a drum kit, and are played either by drum pedals or by drum sticks. Associated hardware and accessories. Subcategories.
Part sets of two or four drums or an individual drum or octo are common additions to a drum kit. Complete and half sets of octobans are commonly mounted in clusters of four, in a square pattern. Mounts for four drums in a straight line, dual mounts for two drums, and individual mounts are all also reasonably common.
Midtown (MDT) - a compact 4-piece poplar drum kit which consists of a 16x14 bass drum, a 10x7 tom, a 13x12 floor tom, and a 13x5.5 snare. Roadshow (RS) - a 5-piece drum set with a 9-ply Poplar shell. This kit is made for beginners.
A Simon Phillips drum kit using straight, boom and multiple boom stands. A cymbal stand is a stand designed primarily to support a suspended cymbal in a drum kit or percussion section. There are many forms, including: Straight stands. Simple boom stands. Counterweighted boom stands. Zero-offset boom stands. Multiple boom stands.