What year did Zildjian go away from hand hammering the A's and switch over to the "automated anvil" like they currently do?
What year did Zildjian......
I`m gonna guess 1929,..when Aram came to the US !!
.....76/#XK9207 Phonic Sound Machine D454/D-505 snares !i
Then I`m gonna guess it was in Quincy MA !!
.....76/#XK9207 Phonic Sound Machine D454/D-505 snares !i
I'm pretty sure they hand hammered the A's up until the 1960's but not 100% sure....this is why I asked.....DOH
According to Zildgian`s web site, in historical timelines,...in the early 80`s, Armand re-invests profits to update factories into modern era with CNC spinning, rolling, and hammering machinery, to find what they call ...The Sound !!
.....76/#XK9207 Phonic Sound Machine D454/D-505 snares !i
I wanna note that my A zildgian with the holes was put in the late 60`s early 70`s by stamp ID,..but the hammering on it looks too uniform and tight to be done by hand,..There are hand operated hammering machienes, but does that count as hand hammered ??
.....76/#XK9207 Phonic Sound Machine D454/D-505 snares !i
I believe they started using the Quincy Drop Hammer in '55. They gradually phased out hand hammering, until they stopped using it altogether sometime around the late 1960's.
-Bill
[COLOR="Purple"]There are old A's I have had as late as late '60's which still showed hand-hammering. Definitely NOT as much as, say, a late '50's...but still some hand hammering was apparent on 'em.
It seems to have stopped when the hollow-ink logo ones started appearing...which would'a been early 70's, right ?[/COLOR]
I'm pretty sure they hand hammered the A's up until the 1960's but not 100% sure....this is why I asked.....DOH
Think you're bang on Ludwig Dude. Webmaster states that in the early 60's they stopped hand hammering. Check it out here:
http://www.vintagecymbalguide.com/zildjian_stamps_a.html
To the untrained eye (ahem, mine) is it easy to tell the difference between a cymbal that's been hand hammered versus one that hasn't? Maybe it's not so easily described.
To the untrained eye (ahem, mine) is it easy to tell the difference between a cymbal that's been hand hammered versus one that hasn't? Maybe it's not so easily described.
No, its not that easy at all. For the most part it helps to know what eras were hand hammered because sometimes the hammering is nearly as perfect as a machine would do.
- Share
- Report