I had read on the forum that getting the yellow out of WMP was not advised but that there was s technique that drum shops use successfully. Does anyone have instructions available? Has anyone ever tried it, if so what were your results?Love this forum!!!!-- 70's LA Camco's - Alice Cooper White-- 66 Rogers Luxor WMP
About 500 boxes of Crest White Strips should do the trick! :)
Seriously though, the way I understand it, the typical WMP yellowing is not ON the wrap, but IN it. It's like a convertible top window - once the plastic has turned yellow, it IS yellow, and there's nothing you can do that will make it clear again. I've read about people using solvents to melt away some of the yellowed plastic that is now the surface layer of the drum wrap, which would make it so that you're looking through less of the yellowed plastic coating to see the design underneath, but that wouldn't actually whiten the wrap, it just makes it thinner and easier to see through - and presumably, more fragile.
I assume you've searched the archives and discovered that your question is not an uncommon one. I know you're not asking for opinions, but I'll offer mine anyway - please feel free to ignore the following :) :
I don't understand the concept of liking/wanting/owning vintage drums, but not wanting them to look like vintage drums. Vintage drums are (generally speaking) less durable and utilitarian than new drums; in other words they work good for certain 'vintage' types of sounds, and not as great for contemporary styles of music and playing. So they're somewhat less useful and flexible, and more finicky and expensive - kind of like a vintage car. So a big part of the appeal is the way they look - the 'vintage vibe'. If someone doesn't like the vintage vibe and the way vintage drums look, why play vintage drums? [/opinion]
If you're not dissuaded from modifying your wrap, please post before and after pics of whatever you end up doing.
Scott (who prefers to think of old wrap as "mellowing" rather than "yellowing".)