An objective way to gauge sticking speed and accuracy.
The purpose of the Drumometer is to measure a drummer's technical accuracy, hand or foot speed and offer
a means to visualize his or her practice routine. Drumometer does this by counting the total number of strokes a drummer can
play within a preset time (1 to 900 seconds). The Drumometer is a wonderful practice motivator to develop a relaxed playing
style, for developing endurance and great technique, and improving their sense of timing. The Drumometer is a useful teaching
tool with a surprise benefit being the almost feverish addiction to practice that it causes as students can't seem to get
enough.
The Drumometer is capable of measuring a drummer's speed on four primary devices:
1. By direct hook-up to the Drum-O-Pad (an internally triggered electronic drum pad),
2. By attaching the supplied Drum-O-Trigger to a tunable practice pad,
3. By direct hook-up to most electronic drums,
4. By attaching the supplied Drum-O-Trigger to a heavily dampened (muffled) drum.
The drum trigger or direct hook-up carries an electronic signal to the Drumometer. When the practice pad or drum is struck,
the timer immediately starts counting down and the counter records each drum stroke or tap until the desired time has elapsed.
When the timer reaches zero (00) the Drumometer stops, the Zero Tone Alert (ZAT) sounds through the internal speaker or optional
headphones, and the number of strokes played is displayed. For a new attempt, press the red Reset button or tap the remote
footswitch and the Drumometer resets the counter to zero (0000) and renews the desired time.
Some ask, "Why do I need
a Drumometer to measure speed when I already have a metronome that tells me how fast I'm playing?" A metronome will tell you
that you are executing a certain pattern at a certain tempo, but it won't tell you how accurately you are executing that pattern.
The Drumometer will show you exactly how well that pattern is being executed. A metronome is an invaluable tool to develop
timing, meter, and accuracy with subdivisions but it does not correct or gauge technical accuracy—the Drumometer does!
Technical accuracy can only be corrected by creating consistent and relaxed strokes. The Drumometer enables you to correct
your strokes immediately while you are playing to achieve the desired goal. So you get immediate feedback on your practice
routine. The same principle holds true for double-strokes, other rudiments, or any pattern you might choose.
In 1999, Boo McAfee teamed with electrical engineer and drummer, Craig Alan, to develop the machine that many had said was
impossible to build. In just 2 months Craig solved the problem of accurately counting drum strokes and built a working proto-type
which was first publicly shown at the 1999 PASIC in Columbus, Ohio. Boo and Craig were surprised by the almost feverish addiction
created by the Drumometer. The excitement generated by the Drumometer prototype was absolutely phenomenal.
The Drumometer
was originally developed to detect a drummer's hand and foot speed, but quickly became a very useful teaching tool. As both
pros and students began using the Drumometer, it became apparent there was a huge misconception concerning speed, power, stick
locations, volume, finesse, control, muscle tension, larger muscle groups vs. smaller muscle groups, stick weight and size,
consistency, rebound, and endurance. The Drumometer shows tangible evidence of these combinations that will not only produce
speed, but also increase endurance, dexterity, and a more relaxed and comfortable playing style. In order to increase the
effectiveness of the Drumometer, Model II has included many requested features.
Drumometer Drumometer Model II Features:
- Timer range of 1 to 900 seconds (15 minutes)
- A metronome with a range of 30—300 BPM with an internal speaker
- Remote footswitch reset input (footswitch included)
- Easily accessible battery compartment
- Rembemers last timer and metronome settings
- ZAT (Zero Alert Tone): a short tone when the Drumometer timer reaches zero
- Internally triggered Drum-O-Pad
- Volume control and output for optional headphones
- Counter range now capable of 99,999 drum strokes
The Drumometer package includes
- 1 Drumometer
- 1 Drum-O-Pad (internally triggered electronic drum pad)
- 1 Drum-O-Trigger (electronic drum trigger)
- 1 Remote Footswitch
- 1 Instrument cable with 1/4" jacks on each end
- 1 piece of Velcro
- 1 piece of 2-way tape
- 1 6mm wing nut
- 1 8mm wing nut
- 2 AA batteries
Get your chops together. Order today.