Zeer mooie DJ Drums Dapster Ash Custom met 24" kick (NIEUW)

Gestart door CollinLeijenaar, sep 26, 2011, 08:34

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CollinLeijenaar

Een erg mooie, nieuwe kit in essenhout (Ash) in satin oil finish. (http://link.marktplaats.nl/478818307)

24" kick
12" tom
14" floor
16" floor
14" snare
+ hardware zoals op de foto
- er zitten geen bekkens of kruk bij
(foto's hieronder)

Over DJ Drums:
DJ Drums is het eigen merk van de OEM builder Wang Percussion in Taiwan. Zij maken drumsets, ketels en onderdelen voor vele grote namen zoals o.a. Tama, DW, Pearl, Yamaha, Gretsch, DDrum, Premier etc. Al die kennis hebben ze in hun eigen merk gestopt en hebben een serie waanzinnige drumsets ontwikkeld onder de naam DJ Drums (Dong Jou Drums). Het is geweldig spul, top kwaliteit en geweldige sound.

Qua range is deze kit te vergelijken met een Tama Superstar of een Silverstar. Qua geluid overstijgt deze set die Tama's. Het essenhout (ash) is garrant voor een heerlijke sound, diep maar gecontroleerd en rond. Met de basdrum verplaats je een flinke lading lucht, wat een kanon!! Heerlijke sound.

Kijk ook bij mijn andere advertenties.

Meer lezen over de history van DJ Drums? Zie hieronder:

Marching to a different beat (from the Tapei Times)

While similar companies have closed or moved to China, one Taiwanese drum manufacturer has thrived by constantly reinventing itself. Wang Percussion's 70 employees produce around 5,000 jazz drums each month. The company is focusing on marketing and brand management to take its business to the next level and keep its production in Taiwan.

The landscape in Houli Township, Taichung County is dotted with plain-looking factories that rise above green rice fields. The area is the leading production center of musical instruments in Taiwan, and in many ways it epitomizes the past successes and current challenges faced by Taiwan's small- and medium-sized enterprises.
"All across Taichung County, you can see unlicensed factories that were built on farmland. This is where Taiwan's economic miracle started," said Chad Huang, the marketing manager of Wang Percussion Instrument Co., Ltd.

Founded in 1956 as a family business making handcrafted saxophones, Wang Percussion, formerly known as Dong Jou Musical, has risen to meet the challenges of globalization by specializing in high-quality jazz drum sets and percussion instruments. Some 99.5 percent of its products are exported to Japan, Europe and North America.
But the road to its current prosperity has not been smooth. "In 1970s the large company Kong Hsue Sheh entered the saxophone market with mass-produced, low-cost products. Half of the more than 100 small manufacturers in Houli were wiped out, and now only 10 to 15 family-owned businesses remain," Huang said. (Kong Hsue Sheh, among other things, distributes scooters made by Japan's Yamaha Motor Co.)

Facing its first significant setback, Wang Percussion quickly switched to making tambourines, then jazz drums, and became the original equipment manufacturer (OEM) for international brands such as Japan's Tama, and US firms Drum Workshop, Gretsch, Ludwig and Ddrum. A textbook example of the remarkable strength and perseverance of local small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), the company now enjoys an average annual turnover of NT$360 million, its 70 employees producing around 5,000 drum sets each month.

The success was hard-earned, as Wang Percussion was one of the few SMEs willing to invest large sums in technology development without government aid. Working with a local machinery manufacturer in the early 1990s, the company developed the first specialized machines for the mechanization of drum shell production and quality control in Taiwan. It is also the only company in the world that makes bamboo drum shells for Drum Workshop.
"If you want to produce quality products, it's essential that you have enough capital. But as relocations from Taiwan to China continue, very few local manufacturers are willing to make the needed investments," Huang said.

Indeed, fierce competition from the other side of the Taiwan Strait has thrust the industry into a state of crisis. Before 2005, Taiwan produced 70 percent of the world's jazz drums, with Wang Percussion contributing 50 percent of the country's total production. But orders from abroad have been cut in half since 2005, and the downturn is likely to continue, Huang said, adding that there only five major jazz drum manufactures remain in Taiwan, and two of them are likely to move to China soon.
"In the early days, Taiwan was the world's number one guitar exporter, but now all the manufacturers have already moved to China. This is now happening with the jazz drum industry," said Wang Wei-pin, whose father founded Wang Percussion.
International jazz drum brands have also set up their own factories in China to capitalize on its cheap labor and abundant resources. Huang said Wang Percussion's long-term partner Tama copied his company's core techniques and started manufacturing jazz drums at their own factory in China. But much to their surprise, Huang said, Tama's market penetration has dropped ever since.

"Tama thought they could duplicate Wang Percussion in China and didn't succeed. What they didn't realize is that it's the Taiwanese experience they need to duplicate. The flexibility of local SMEs that comes from their networks of outsourcing and their complete supply chains is not something you can replicate in a short period of time," Huang said.

In 2000, Wang Percussion reinvented itself once again, this time making the shift from OEM to original design manufacturing (ODM). The company created two brand names for its products -- DJ, for drum sets and percussion instruments, and WP, for xylophones, marimbas and glockenspiels. But unlike Taiwan's information technology sector, which has long enjoyed the full attention of the national government, local SMEs like Wang Percussion have had to rely on their own acumen when it comes to taking the cautious steps toward branding.
"Without any help from the outside, SMEs tends to adopt a conservative attitude when it comes to brand-building since they don't have the money and resources to fail," Huang said.
The son of a local blue-collar family who obtained a doctorate in economics in the UK, Huang, 33, believes local businesses have the potential to make a successful shift from OEM to ODM.

Recalling how his father came to own a machinery factory after starting out as a motorcycle repairman, Huang said SMEs are strong because they cooperate with each other. "People from my father's generation helped each other out, even when they made the same products," he explained. "Taiwan's SMEs are like amoebas. They are small, flexible, resourceful and can team up with different manufacturers to come up with different products. There is nothing they cannot manage to do."
"Now that we have world-class techniques and products, the next step is to create our own icons [successful brands] through marketing," he added.
Long overdue assistance from the government finally came last year when the Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI) initiated a project to help local jazz drum manufacturers develop and share new technologies. But the effort has been met with skepticism from larger businesses such as Wang Percussion.

"Big companies certainly have doubts about joining [ITRI's] program" because they "run the risk of leaking their core-techniques to other manufacturers," Huang said.
He believes that if the government is to come up with feasible plans to assist his industry it should recognize that big and small enterprises have different needs. Small businesses need help with improving manufacturing techniques and enhancing capacity, whereas mature enterprises like Wang Percussion need help with marketing, brand management and client relations.
"I think it is important to build up a dialogue between government offices and the industry so that practical services can meet our demands for a successful industrial shift," Huang said.




Jochem

#1
sep 26, 2011, 08:40 Last Edit: sep 26, 2011, 08:46 by Jochem
Wat wil je er voor hebben?

Edit:
Oops nvm

Nijlpaard

850 euro
Every drummer that had a name, had a name because of his individual playing. He didn't sound like anybody else, So everybody that I ever listened to, in some form, influenced my taste -Buddy Rich-
- Sonor Delite Walnut roots/Mapex Saturn Root beert burst/Sabian HH(X)/Artisan

CollinLeijenaar

#3
sep 26, 2011, 08:46 Last Edit: sep 26, 2011, 08:52 by CollinLeijenaar
Ja, inderdaad, 850 euro is mijn vraagprijs. Het is werkelijk een geweldige kit met een waanzinnige sound!

Paintpro

Hey Collin,

Anders laat je het ook even weten wanneer je die Bamboo DJ weg doet ;)

En nog welkom op DF btw.

CollinLeijenaar

Hahaha, die Bamboo gaat nooit weg denk ik ;)

Omhoog