Difference between revisions of "Meinl Reference Class"
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==== Hi-Hats==== | ==== Hi-Hats==== | ||
| + | *''' [[Meinl Hetro Hihat|Hetro Hihat]] - [[Meinl Reference Class 14" Hetro Hihat|14"]] | ||
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*''' [[Meinl Hihat|Hihat]] - [[Meinl Reference Class 13" Hihat|13"]] [[Meinl Reference Class 14" Hihat|14"]] | *''' [[Meinl Hihat|Hihat]] - [[Meinl Reference Class 13" Hihat|13"]] [[Meinl Reference Class 14" Hihat|14"]] | ||
Latest revision as of 06:48, 6 October 2025
Contents
Introduction: 19892
Discontinued: ? (by 1992)2
Background: This was the company's top of the line series at the time it was produced.
Innovation: A professional quality line that features a highly polished brilliant finish.1 These cymbals had a wider tonal range than the other Meinl lines of this era.2
Alloy: B8
Quality: Professional
Applications: Studio, live
Sound:
Rides
Crashes
Hi-Hats
Splashes
Information from:
1 Modern Drummer Equipment Annual 1990-1991, page 73
2 The Cymbal Book (Hugo Pinksterboer, pages 162 & 163)
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