I recently purchased a pre-WWII 13.75 inch A Zildjian cymbal that was described as "very light". I got it intending to pair it with another as a set of hi hats. That ain't gonna happen as it only weighs 501 grams and is waaay too thin for my giant heavy foot.
I have NEVER seen a 14 inch cymbal this thin and after checking it out I'm thinking it was a one off / hand made / special order piece. I'll lay out my evidence below.
Am I nuts?
1. Cymbal is 13 3/4 across one axis but only 13 9/16 on the other. There's no sign of it being trimmed anywhere.
2. The bell isn't perfectly centered on the cymbal across the long axis but it is centered across the shorter axis (more evidence it hasn't been trimmed). Along the long axis, the cymbal measures exactly 5 inches away from the bell but only 4 13/16 toward the other edge.
3. #s 1 and 2 give the cymbal a slight (and perfect) tilt of about 6-8 degrees toward the drummer.
4. It is SUPER THIN and flexes very very easily. It's the lightest cymbal of this size I've ever seen. (I would LOVE to see lighter examples, though)
5. The last photo (following post) will even show that the hole is also slightly off center within the bell.
My hand made 1st stamp K Zildjian shares all of those same characteristics except the 501 grams part. It just doesn't look like a cymbal that would have come off A Zildjian's machine process.
So, what do you folks think? Have I lost it or is there a distinct possibility this cymbal was made for a pro or maybe a recording studio?
Pete