How to Clean a cymbal | crossxpollination

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  • Опубликовано: 1 дек 2024

Комментарии • 7

  • @velofisher2
    @velofisher2 6 лет назад +2

    What an amazing difference. Awesome!!

  • @digitalassemblage
    @digitalassemblage 6 лет назад +1

    Quite the transformation-seems brighter, and totally agree, the decay is much longer post-cleaning. Thanks for sharing the process.

    • @crosspollination6626
      @crosspollination6626  6 лет назад

      Hello Doug. Not sure, I haven't taken an aural skills training classes lately, but I believe the note of the cymbal is actually one half step difference. So the sound is different too... same camera, same mike, same sticks, same atmosphere, and same dampness. Within 3 hours of each other. Weird huh?

  • @wkrp71
    @wkrp71 4 года назад

    Non-scientific experiment with Zildjian Cymbal Cleaner by a drummer: I hope to post this on multiple locations that show the Zildjian Cymbal cleaner. I'll premise this by saying that I've been using Bar keepers friend for a number of years successfully, among other cymbal cleaners over the years. The Zildjian about 15-16 bucks per 8 oz. bottle, I find these cleaners are a great money maker for cymbal companies. Bottom line, I'm a drummer who hopes to spread the word to other drummers to hopefully help them save a buck.
    I recently bought a new Zildjian brilliant cymbal and wanted to test this cleaner. It comes in a white liquid that one spreads evenly, by sparingly, per the directions, onto both sides of the cymbal. Then it is wiped off with a soft cloth. My first impression was that it is very messy and the black oxidation that comes off (even on a cleaner cymbal like my newest one) is excessive, so one needs plenty of soft clothes. This newest Zildjian cymbal still had a sheen to it, but there were stick marks that the cleaner did not get off. You're going to need a A LOT of elbow grease to get all the polish off. At this stage of my life, I've used up most of my elbow grease.
    Drummers need to keep in mind that cymbals, like Zildjian, come from the factory with a factory-applied chemical sheen/coat that eventually wears off through cleaning. This is fine and purely natural. Bar keepers helper is a world easier. Some people point of that is has an acid in it, but it's a WEAK acid, that won't harm the cymbal. Also, BKF doesn't irritate your hands/fingers, and if it doesn't hurt your skin, it's sure not going to damage/hurt your cymbal.
    With BKF, wet the cymbal, use the powder of liquid version and a small sponge. Let it sit for a few second, then rise off. Volla! It's comes out with a nice shine, without the endless elbow grease. You may opt for the liquid version of BKF to avoid micro abrasions with the powder, but those are minimal and not noticed by the naked eye. I also like the powder version sometimes so that I can scrub with a soft sponge to get the stick marks off the cymbal.
    I hope this helps. BMM

  • @melissapierce69
    @melissapierce69 6 лет назад

    Did the "adhesive" come off?

    • @crosspollination6626
      @crosspollination6626  6 лет назад

      Yes it did! That may be why the sound had more ring and great decay distance. Good point.

  • @melissapierce69
    @melissapierce69 6 лет назад +1

    "Dry ride" (?) vs wet ride lol