thanks for the comment! yea I was also surprised about the lack of “press” this release was getting, exactly why i decided to shoot a little video on it
Just got my DW5000 Carbon Fiber 50th Anniversary Single Pedal last week! Thinking of bringing it to studio rehersals but worried that sand and tiny stones caught on my shoes will scratch the footboard. Any experience with carbon fiber durability?
Hey, I don’t know if you’ll see this but, do you think having the carbon fiber plate will prone it to possibly break in the future if too much force is used? I know this was posted about a year ago so maybe you can do a follow up about it? I’m looking to get myself one, anyways thanks!
I am not a fan of the 9000. I play in socks and I don’t feel the metal like I do with the 5000. I’m definitely interested in that Carbon Fiber joint tho! 😎
These will be $1-$2k when out of stock. DW has been that one drum company that stands up to its collector and performance series. A dang collector snare used to be $500 and now it be $1200. The sabian snare was $1200 and now be $8-$15k. One of my fav kits… the candy apple red was $2500 for a… 4-5 piece. Not it be 4500 for that.
I would make a few changes to the design and all of the 50th Anniversary nonsense and charging $445 for a pedal that should be available to purchase for 1/2 that is unacceptable. Not exactly thrilled with their intent on this, it's more self promotion and charging customers for it. Sorry, but DW is not doing right to the customers. They should just put the product on the market, charge normal markups/discounts and if they want to do some kind of 50th Anniversary product, make it a snare drum that's got 24K Gold plating and some silly design on it. Something that a normal gigging drummer wouldn't use on a gig type product that's specifically for the collectors, not gigging players.
Thanks for reviewing this. I'm shocked that nobody else is covering this pedal
thanks for the comment! yea I was also surprised about the lack of “press” this release was getting, exactly why i decided to shoot a little video on it
Yeah I bought the DW 9000 IN TITANIUM. Different setup the auxiliary side was.on oppositè side its lighter the bearings bigger
You can change footboard angle. Above the spring you have (+) and (-). Just set position to (-) and footboard angle will rise.
That adjusts the beater angle not the footboard angle, As shown in the video, footboard angle is adjusted by the placement of the chain on the cam,
@@mattskate111 Yes, you're right but the footboard will move following the beater. Useless option anyway 🙂
Just got my DW5000 Carbon Fiber 50th Anniversary Single Pedal last week! Thinking of bringing it to studio rehersals but worried that sand and tiny stones caught on my shoes will scratch the footboard. Any experience with carbon fiber durability?
I just got mine today, I’m number 544
Hey, I don’t know if you’ll see this but, do you think having the carbon fiber plate will prone it to possibly break in the future if too much force is used? I know this was posted about a year ago so maybe you can do a follow up about it? I’m looking to get myself one, anyways thanks!
I am not a fan of the 9000. I play in socks and I don’t feel the metal like I do with the 5000. I’m definitely interested in that Carbon Fiber joint tho! 😎
These will be $1-$2k when out of stock. DW has been that one drum company that stands up to its collector and performance series. A dang collector snare used to be $500 and now it be $1200. The sabian snare was $1200 and now be $8-$15k. One of my fav kits… the candy apple red was $2500 for a… 4-5 piece. Not it be 4500 for that.
They are clever that they made the cheaper 5000 the limited edition pedal, easier to sell 1000 at a lower price.
Don Lombardi 😁
I would make a few changes to the design and all of the 50th Anniversary nonsense and charging $445 for a pedal that should be available to purchase for 1/2 that is unacceptable. Not exactly thrilled with their intent on this, it's more self promotion and charging customers for it. Sorry, but DW is not doing right to the customers.
They should just put the product on the market, charge normal markups/discounts and if they want to do some kind of 50th Anniversary product, make it a snare drum that's got 24K Gold plating and some silly design on it. Something that a normal gigging drummer wouldn't use on a gig type product that's specifically for the collectors, not gigging players.