Well you know how I feel about this cymbal since we've spoken at length about it. One of the true holy grails.
I remember my drum teacher at North Texas, Ed Soph, said that if you find a truly great cymbal, BUY IT, no matter what it costs...max out a credit card if you have to.
It seems there are three types in the drum world - drum nuts, cymbal nuts, and drum AND cymbal nuts.
Drum nuts go crazy for drums...snares, sets, etc, and they spend an absolute fortune on them. They usually have way more drumsets than they need, and at least 10 snare drums. But only one set of cymbals. They don't really understand spending more than $50 on a cymbal, since it's just what they are playing to accompany their awesome DRUMS!!!
Then there's the cymbal nuts, that feel the exact same way in reverse. They have TONS of cymbals, way more than any one person could ever need. And they are usually never completely satisfied, always looking for the holy grail, even though their cymbals are better than 99.9% of other drummers' cymbals. And they have one set of drums (often cheap or comprised of orphans), and one snare...just enough to set up around their awesome CYMBALS!!!
And of course the drum AND cymbal nuts, who are just all around gear fanatics. These people will sell off their first born to get the best drums, snares, and cymbals, and they have massive collections of all three. Unfortunately for my wallet, I fall into this third category.
The way I see it, playing jazz anyway, you are hitting a cymbal 6 times per measure in a standard 4/4 ride pattern, and that's not counting the hi hats being playing with your feet. In a 32 bar form tune, that's 192 cymbal strikes. Multiply that by 10-12 choruses, and you are hitting a ride cymbal 2000 or more times, PER TUNE! That's a lot of cymbal sound to be sitting right next to in one night, so it better be good! I find it comparable to spending good money on a bed...you spend a third of your life there, so it's worth every penny to get a good night's rest with a high quality mattress.
I was very lucky early on to find an incredible 22" Trans stamp, which remains one of the best ride cymbals I've ever heard. I bought it for $75. But I always wanted old K's, and have spent many thousands of dollars on them over the years. I've had at least 100 at this point. I've let go of 4 old K's that I really wish I could get back, but that's part of running a business and trying to offer desirable items.
Just yesterday, I spent $6K on a set of old stamp K's that I found out about and played a couple of years ago for the first time. I've been trying to buy them ever since...they just sound that magical...and when the owner finally offered them for sale, I drove to his place with the cash as soon as I could. I didn't hesitate, because the truly great ones are so incredibly hard to find. I am NOT a wealthy person, but I know they will only go up in value, so they will be a good investment. I know many drum folks would find that impossible to understand, but these particular cymbals will bring me far more musical happiness than any set of drums.