Difference between revisions of "B20 By Sabian"
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'''Introduction:''' 1983<br> | '''Introduction:''' 1983<br> | ||
'''Discontinued:''' Late 1984<br> | '''Discontinued:''' Late 1984<br> | ||
− | '''Background:''' This series contained less silver than Sabian's other B20 lines, in order to sell at a cheaper price point. (Actually no silver was used) <br> | + | '''Background:''' This series contained less silver than Sabian's other B20 lines, in order to sell at a cheaper price point. (Actually no silver was used). This was Sabian's first attempt at a budget-minded B20 alloy series. Twenty years would pass before trying again, with the [[Sabian XS20|XS20]] line. <br> |
'''Innovation:''' Hand-hammered cymbals with unique sound and appearance<br> | '''Innovation:''' Hand-hammered cymbals with unique sound and appearance<br> | ||
'''Alloy:''' [[Alloys#B20_Alloy|B20]]<br> | '''Alloy:''' [[Alloys#B20_Alloy|B20]]<br> |
Revision as of 13:13, 10 August 2024
Introduction: 1983
Discontinued: Late 1984
Background: This series contained less silver than Sabian's other B20 lines, in order to sell at a cheaper price point. (Actually no silver was used). This was Sabian's first attempt at a budget-minded B20 alloy series. Twenty years would pass before trying again, with the XS20 line.
Innovation: Hand-hammered cymbals with unique sound and appearance
Alloy: B20
Quality: Entry to mid-level
Production: Produced by Tosco in Italy. Liquid bronze was poured into molds. Once dry, a mounting hole was drilled, the cymbals were lathed, and then edged. The cymbals suffered from premature breakage, lending to its short lifespan.
Users:
Sound: