Weiss 10" Hi-Hat Cymbals with Marching Snare Hi-Hat Attachment

Weiss SKU: SW-MSPHHA-PACK
2 reviews

Price:
Sale price$169.95
Stock:
In stock

Description

The Bundle includes Weiss 10″ Hi-Hat Cymbals with a Marching Snare Hi-Hat Attachment. All the components needed to equip your marching snare with a small hi-hat pair.

The Liberty One Marching Snare Hi-Hat Attachment attaches to the tension posts on the side of most marching snare drums providing a method of mounting a small hi-hat to the drum as well as easy height adjustment. Designed to hold up to the busy and constant use during a drum corps season.

The Weiss 10" Traditional Cast Hi-Hat Cymbals feature a bright, articulate tone that works well in almost any musical setting.

Product Info

SKU SW-MSPHHA-PACK

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Customer Reviews

Cheap Price, Great Cymbals

Rating
Posted by
Brandon
Date Posted
09/18/2024

This setup was the cheapest I could find for marching snare mounted cymbals. I have been a customer of Steve Weiss for over a decade and have never gotten a bad product from the site, but I was weary of this one. Now having used these cymbals for a few weeks I am highly impressed. The adjustments you are able to make are impressive for a small package. The hardware allows for adjustments and highly customizable sounds you are aiming for. These cut through the band and have a solid full sound. So far, the cymbals do not shift or move while playing. The sound stays consistent through a 10 min show. Highly recommend this product.

Works with modifications

Rating
Posted by
Mark
Date Posted
03/14/2024

The idea of this is great, but the design is flawed. The rod coming up through the cymbals is not long enough, so when you set the bottom cymbal on the felt and place the top cymbal on, it is even with the top of the rod. Then you add the top felt and washer, there is not enough compression room to get close to starting the nut on top. There is no adjustment in the rod, there is a section under the bottom felt that can be screwed down which allows the spring to go further down, but that is not nearly enough. So I ended up taking a tool to cut off the bottom of the plastic receiver that the bottom felt sits on, and then taking a drill bit to enlarge the bottom of the hole a little bit so that it would go over a threaded section of the rod that is under the cymbal. I took of the bottom hand screw/nut so the spring would go further down. Lastly, I took the felt and cut it in half, and I finally got enough room to get the top wing nut to catch. The cymbals are really tight, and if the wing nut loosens much it will come off, so my percussion players have to keep a watch on them rotating and unscrewing. With all these modifications, it does work, and I like the sound I'm getting over using rimshots. But beware that there will be some modifications needed to get this to work.