The No.1 website for musicians
We've seen the snares, now here's the mini kit from new British custom builder Carrera
Geoff Nicholls (Rhythm), Fri 12 Nov 2010, 11:58 am GMT
Dave Carrera, aided by Mike Worthington, has been making drums in Chesham, Bucks for something over a year.
"Leaving school I was in the army, but getting shot and stabbed soon put paid to that!" he says. "I came out and did City and Guilds carpentry and joinery, then I jumped on the IT bandwagon. For 25 years I looked at drums and thought, I can make these. But life, drink, women, gigs all took over!"
We gave Carrera's first snare drums a glowing review earlier in the year. Now we have a lightweight kit designed specifically to project on smaller gigs where space is tight.
"The lovingly constructed vertical ply shells and the excellent finishes bode well for the future of Carrera drums."
The basic Terrier kit is a three-piece comprising 18"x14" bass drum with riser, 12"x10" floor tom with legs and 10"x6" rack tom. Dave has added to this an extra 8"x5" rack tom, with different shell construction and also the original Terrier snare.
Shells are made from grade A Finnish birch, 12-ply and 6mm thick, except for the 8" tom which is 6-ply and 3mm thick with 3mm reinforcing rings. They are constructed so that all 12 plies are aligned vertically. This is said to aid rather than hinder the progress of soundwaves down through the shell.
The reason that most conventional shells have alternating cross plies is to make the shell stronger and more stable - plus it's easier to cut a smooth bearing edge on the horizontally-laid inner and outer plies.
All bearing edges are cut to 45° with a small cut-back, flattened off on top to 0.5mm then sanded and waxed. Although there are no bottom heads, Dave has cut bearing edges top and bottom. "Just showing off," he jokes. But it would enable a bottom head to be added at some later stage if you wanted.
Carrera's shells are accurately round to within less than 1mm - which is top class - and they are blemish free.
As much care is taken on the inside as the outside. The bearing edges are precise and the lacquered finish is superb. One thing that sometimes lets down small craft shops is the lacquering, which simply lacks that glassy sheen attained by the big boys. No such problem here - the Dark Teak stain and high gloss lacquer of the review kit is Rolls Royce-glorious.
Finishing off the shells there is an oval black and gold badge which states 'Carrera Terrier, Hand Made in England'. Each shell is stamped inside and signed with a serial number. The review kit is the first Terrier kit and thus has the serial number 0001. All this is good.
For us, then, it's a shame that the kit came with wooden hoops. They are deeper than you would normally experience with metal hoops and are held down with claws and tension bolts via twin-point mount short-tube lugs. The lugs are solid but the claws are those old-style generic ones with iffy-looking chrome plate.
The effect could be cutting-edge but actually looks curiously old fashioned, like the cheap single headed drums companies used to sell as their starter ranges.
With the snare we're back on more-than-solid ground. It's a 13-inch x 3¾-inch piccolo fitted with eight double-ended tube lugs and a good quality generic throw-off. The wires are the redoubtable WorldMax 20-stranders, though Carrera says he's now moved on to Fatcat or PureSound wires.
This is a tasty little snare that looks top quality. So how does it sound?
First look: Carrera Drums Terrier drum kit
Video: Simon Mellish tries out new Carrera kit
Cornford Amplification Carrera
You need to be logged in to post a comment. Login or Register to post a comment.
Fantastic snare. Bass drum projects well. Interesting design.
Wooden hoops and claws on the toms hinder playing. Expensive.
A lovingly made, exemplary mini-kit with a great snare but held back by a couple of design flaws and a high price.
All MusicRadar's reviews are by independent product specialists, who are not aligned to any gear manufacturer or retailer. Our experts also write for renowned magazines such as Guitarist, Total Guitar, Computer Music, Future Music and Rhythm. All are part of Future PLC, the biggest publisher of music making magazines in the world.




Terrier Kit