
Tim Brown
New member
DxRocker said:Ok... this will be my final post in this thread because I'm sick of people who are not willing to listen and open their mind for one tiny inch. Before you say I'm the same... I've tried out the carbo sticks and know what I'm talking about. I've also witnessed AA sabians being totally destroyed in front of my eyes by a guy using aheads, and it wasn't his first time either. It never happened again since he went back to good old vic firths though.
Thank you for prooving my theory. A wooden stick is a shock-absorbing material wich is a LOT softer then cymbals. When you get into the music, it's quite common to start smaking the crashes and china's pretty hard.
If you use carbo sticks or a like, wich are a LOT harder then wood, they can not absorb the same amount of vibration as common wood sticks. This excess of vibration goes straight to the cymbal you are hitting, hence the impact becomes much bigger, wich causes a lot more vibration to the cymbal.
When you play rimshots with these, that excess of vibration goes straight to your wrists, because the hoops of your drum will not absorb vibrations like a moving cymbal will. You will never brake a hoop into pieces. What can possibly happen though is that your hoop will get dented from doing rimshot, wich in turn will affect the tuning of the drum. A dented hoop is as good as a broken hoop.
This does NOT mean that if you start playing with such sticks that you will brake a cymbal in the 5 minutes that follow. Most of the time you will not even brake anything.
If you play with horrible technique and wood sticks, chances are big that you will brake a cymbal. If you play with horrible technique and aheads, we don't speak of chances anymore. It's a certainty that your cymbals will brake.
If you play with fairly good technique and wood sticks, your cymbals are safe (assuming there are no weak spots in it due to production errors or stuff). If you play with fairly good technique and aheads... you have an "elevated" chance of breaking a cymbal.
As for the wrists: for people who are subject to easy injury and/or are weak boned and stuff, these sticks are total hell and will lead to a condition of wich I don't know the english name. That is a certainty of 110%
Your example of the wallet is void and you know it, because wallets are not a hard material that can crack when you smack them or drop them. You may take a 10-ton hammer and smack your wallet with it and it won't do a thing.
If you can't understand that, then I also don't expect you to understand the issue with carbo sticks.
Thank you and good night.
Happy drumming
Hmmm funny, because you seem to be the one unwilling to listen, you're just wanting to spout your opinion.
Okay you've played for 9 years. Great!
I've played 3 times that amount of time. That and about $5 and I can get some "pseudo-coffee-flavored liquid" at Starbucks. (Sorry Starbucks fans - they have a ton of drinks, but none of it actually tastes like a regular old cup of COFFEE!

I've broken a few cymbals using wooden sticks over the years, but after 20 years of using Aquarian Graphite sticks (which I record with exclusively, because I like the sound they have on the cymbals) I have not broken a cymbal yet with them.
Tim