How To Buy A Drum Set

By Lance Sermons


Investing in a drum set is like purchasing a car. The foremost considerations ought to be reliability and resale value.

Experienced drummers understand the reason behind it, however for novices who are still within the learning process, getting the first drum set can be somewhat a stressful experience. There's a wide array of brands to choose between and you ought to pick a kit that's appropriate for your level of skill.

For beginner drummers, obtaining a new kit entails a little knowledge about name brands that have been proven for reliability and performance. It's very similar to buying a car. Trusted big brands are usually priced higher, so if you opt to resell or trade it later, you will still get a fair money value from this investment. Furthermore, these brands are trusted due to their "hardware" quality. Similarly, in choosing a drum kit that stays intact longer regardless of heavy use, you'll select trusted big brands. They're the types often recommended by great instrumentalists.

A typical drum kit includes the base or kick drum, snare drum, hi-hat cymbals, ride cymbal, crash, cymbal and the tom-toms. The base drum pedal, stool, snare, hi-hat stands, sticks, at least a single cymbal stand along with a set-up instruction pamphlet will be the basic parts part of a package.

Although, Pearl is still the leading name today, but Tama, Yamaha, DW, Ayotte, Gretsch, Premier, Mapex, Ludwig and Sonor are also competitive brands. There's also a range of brand names for cymbals to choose from like Zildjian, Sabian, Paiste, Meinl, Bosphorus and Ufip. A novice kit may cost around $200 -$500. But the truth is you might get more for your investment when you opt for used drum sets.

Buying the kit that's not right may hamper the right path to your bombastic drumming skill. If you're confused how to pick the perfect kit, take an experienced drummer along while you spin around. In order to make things easier, below are great tips regarding how to purchase a drum set:

1. Buying a drum set is much like purchasing a car. Better go for kits by trusted big brands to secure good value for your very own investment. A complete 5-piece kit is often the preferred choice by most beginners because it is more pleasant to experiment with in almost any environment.

2. Should you choose a completely new kit, ensure that it is directly from an authorized dealer who knows best regarding their products.

3. Make sure that you are getting a kit with base drums, snare drums and floor toms which have eight tuning lugs per side rather than six, additionally, the small toms 5 or 6. This is for balanced tuning and accuracy.

4. Some kits don't have cymbals in the package. In such case, you should buy cymbals separately. It can save you some bucks whenever you buy cymbals in a few packages which already include the hi-hat pair and also a crash-ride.

5. Picking out a second hand drum set is often safer once you buy it from someone noted for taking better good care of his instruments. Just make sure that both top and bottom heads remain intact on the drums, the tuning lugs complete, the exterior drum finish in good shape, every part in better shape as well as the locking mechanisms in position.




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