Share your tips for dumb little things you do to save a coupla bucks like using the rubber grommets on flip-top bottles (grolsch is the classic but tea-totalers like myself can get that fancy French lemonade in import stores) to keep your guitar straps secure. Here's my drummer submission:
Back story first: so I might have landed a gig drumming for a group where loud drums aren't really going to be most appropriate so have been trying out options like brushes, brush-rods, etc. Brush rods seem to be the best fit for me for this project I guess, but they're $25 a crack and do NOT last long in my hands, even when working VERY hard to re-wire my drumming and rein it in. So...I saw at [box-store guitar place] they had some knock-offs for about $15 which is better but we're still looking at the same problem of durability and my experience so far w/ the durability is that I got what I paid for as the rods are clearly lower quality wood & are shedding faster than the Pro-Marks.
So I started poking around the garage. As is normal buying any home in the US, the previous owner left some some stuff behind & one of those things was a pile of PVC pipe and seeing that got me thinking. Originally the plan was to see if there was a section of dowels I could epoxy into some PVC (and that's still on the table, more to come) but I wondered what tubes would sound like as far as volume and tone on a drum. So I cut a section to the length of 2b sticks, beveled the ends so there's no sharp impact on the heads.

Sound: I kinda expected a hollow-tube sound when striking things. Nope. Doesn't sound very different from hitting w/ butt-end of sticks, just a small maybe 20-25% volume reduction?
Feel: so this is the only downside I've found so far. Because they are somewhat flexible, this gives them a bit of a snap so my first go after an entire band rehearsal I did end up w/ some blood blisters in the middle section of my index fingers. That being said, if I had practiced w/ them more the week leading up to longer rehearsal to get used to them/build up callus instead of bounding right in to play for 3 hrs straight, I'd probably have been fine.
Results: No discernible damage to drum heads or the sticks themselves, they seem to hold up better than wood honestly. I have some concerns about catastrophic breakage and splintering maybe? but eh, risk little, win little.
IDK y'all. I might be done buying drumsticks. A 10-foot section of pipe is like $5 and could get 3.5 pair from each section. The sticks I like have now jumped to literally $20 a pair. This is a little more than dumb money savings.
Is there any reason not to do this that I haven't considered? I have done a bit of googling and surely can't be the first tightwad goober to come up w/ this idea. These are basically free. I could saw a couple more up and send them to you if you want to give it a try and don't have access to a saw and sandpaper.