Hi folks,
One area which I lack experience (if that's possible at 40yrs old starting drumming at about age 12) or, rather, shall I say, lack expertise, is cymbal care. There seems to be 2 opposing schools of thought out there, or at least 2 different approaches to cymbal care(or lack thereof): Either regularly clean them and try to keep them in nice new(ish) condition; or don't clean them and let the patina build up- with a change in tone as a goal. Some adhere to one school, others to the other end of the extreme, and some may employ both approaches-differing depending on the particular cymbal.
I am selling this pair of early 70s Zildjian A High-hats. They have not been used by me, (this is a flip) and the previous owner really let the patina (and dirt) build up on the tops. (See Pics).
The question is, to clean or not to clean? I have gotten significant results from soaking cymbals in Dawn+h2o, though am concerned that it would remove a significant amount of patina. Is this impossible and should I soak and clean away-where patina removal would require something other than Dawn+h2o?
Or, should I just let them be and let the next owner deal with this?
Normally this is not THAT difficult of a decision, but this dirt/patina is quite dark.....and you know how some players like their cymbals that way......
BTW - These are both on the heavy side, both around 1200 grams.
Taking suggestions - goal being getting the most $ out of these (let's be honest) while also trying to cater to the next buyer (despite not identified yet).
Thanks for any feedback.
BTW, these can be seen in my For Sale post: "Cymbals For Sale".
John