[COLOR="DarkRed"]I wasn't suggesting Canadian Eh's are rare....in the sense that they are more valuable than a regular A. Just that they are a bit of curio down on this side of the border....there really aren't many of 'em around.
I have seen folks try to eBay 'em and talk 'em up as rare, and they really don't end up fetching more than an American-made A of the same vintage.
Hmmmm....usually it is a medium or heavier cymbal which is a good candidate for rivets. If the cymbal is thin and has some overtones, then adding THAT many rivets might kill it.
But sometimes a thin cymbal can be sorta dry. What is it about the cymbal you don't like ? Is it clangy ? Too bright or midrangey ? Metallic-y sounding ? Too dry-sounding ? Etc....
In my book Help2 there are 2 general reasons to add rivets:
1) Add some wash and sizzle to the cymbal, give it a tad more sustain and slow the sonic decay.
2) Mask an ugly overtone, ring, roar, or hum/whistle. (I have seen folks successfully do this with 1 or 2 rivets)
Mind BlowiDRILL an old K ! It's a crime punishable by Lobotomy !
Back at that.... cymbal forum.... there's this IDIOT.....some doctor in the south....the guy obviously has tons of money and he buys up old K's...and drills them as soon as they arrive ! Then brags about it. And we aren't talking heavy old hand cymbals. We are talking perfect-weight big rides and crashes....That jerk has messed up more K's than I can count. But then again, I think he is a urologist, so.....
A perfect K which has survived in it's original factory state for over 50 years, and one jackass with control issues mauls 'em...
Naw, you can put the rivets anywhere, really. Personally, I think 6 would be overkill ..I think 6 is overkill on ANY cymbal. If it ain't doin' what you want by 2 or 3 rivets...you might as well stop and just sell it...because it ain't gonna do what you want at 4, 5, or 6....[/COLOR]