
This is the raw lumber…. maple on top
of the purpleheart. You can use a variety of
woods. Keep in mind, some of the more
musical “tonewoods”. There are many,
kinds of wood that make great instruments. I
suggest that you look up instrument woods
for examples: maple, oak, ash, mahogany, etc
are some that I have used. Keep in mind that
some exotics are being exploited and make
environmentally conscious choices. No vibes
in killing the last tree!
Look for woods that can be recycled! I
have built many quality drums from scrap
wood. Look for shipping pallets and
containers etc. Just make sure to remove
nails etc.

I am building a drum from staves. Staves
are the individual pieces of wood that
create the shell of the drum. This is how I
cut the staves… all to 1” and 5/8” in
this case. If you want a larger drum use
wider staves. The amount of staves
determines the angle of the cuts on the side
of the staves…. You can figure out the
correct angle by using the following
method… amount of staves x 2, then divide
360 by that number. I use 18 staves so it
will look like this… 18x2= 36. 360/36=10.
10 here is the degrees to cut the angles. If
you use 16 staves you will cut to 11 and ¼
degrees. I like using 18 staves because the
more staves used the easier it is to make
the drum round. And getting a setting of 10
degrees on the table saw is much easier than
11 and ¼ degrees…

After all of the staves are cut to 24”x
13/16”x1 and 5/8”. Now they are ready to
be cut to the proper angles, I am using 18
staves so that makes the required angle 10
degrees.

Here is how I set the table saw. The rip
fence must be set so that the edge of the
wood is JUST BARELY being cut. The angle of
the blade leans in toward the rip fence…

Here is a picture of the desired cut….
Saw is unplugged!

Top view. Notice that the tip of the
blade is just barely getting any of the
wood. It must begin to bite there. After all
saves are cut on the right side, you must
adjust the rip fence to cut the left side.
Cut the left side the same way, with the
same angle. Just barely getting the bottom
corner of the wood. They will look like the
following…

Here is the 10 degree angle cut on both
sides of each stave…
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