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P&H Bows Archet en fibre de verre pour violoncelle 4/4

5 modèles à choisir:
Les archets P&H sont fabriqués à partir de fibre de verre teintée de couleur bois, ce qui permet d’obtenir une baguette droite et durable. Ils archets sont bien équilibrés et dotés de véritables crins de cheval de même que d’un mécanisme de tension en douceur. Il ne se déforme pas dans des conditions humides ou chaudes. La tension du ressort reste réglée à vie, même lorsqu’il est laissé au maximum pendant des semaines. Cet archet P&H présente une finition marron chaleureuse sur le manche avec une hausse en plastique noir, une garniture bicolore et une poignée en similicuir.
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Disappointing but will suffice for now
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Succursale Ottawa, Ontario
I bought this because it was the nicest one they had on the shelf and it could be easily re-haired.
I have typically spent about $70-90 on my bows until now and thought that they weren’t worth re-hairing because anything in this price range is super cheap but I would take any of my old bows over this one. I’ll be re-hairing another bow as soon as I can get hair ordered in.
Unfortunately I doubt that I’ll ever try the really neat 5 minute re-hair feature on this bow because it just isn’t worth it.
It is heavy at the tip and is not very responsive. I also find the sound from it to be quite dull and unexpressive. I’ll play around with different rosins but I’m not hopeful and am looking forward to wearing out this bow so I can justify replacing it with a student quality bow. I tried it and then swapped my strings and it was still underwhelming.
The difference between this and my other cheap bows has me really wanting to get a $200-500 bow to compare. Because it really is that significant of a difference.
If you cannot afford a higher quality bow I would risk one of their $50 bows before buying this one because it is the worst out of my 4 bows so far (I have used wood, fibreglass and carbon fibre).
For under $100 it gets the job done, just not as well as other sub $100 bows.
That said… this is a very subjective thing and it may work perfectly for your playing style and desired sound. It may also sound a lot better with a different cello.
I have typically spent about $70-90 on my bows until now and thought that they weren’t worth re-hairing because anything in this price range is super cheap but I would take any of my old bows over this one. I’ll be re-hairing another bow as soon as I can get hair ordered in.
Unfortunately I doubt that I’ll ever try the really neat 5 minute re-hair feature on this bow because it just isn’t worth it.
It is heavy at the tip and is not very responsive. I also find the sound from it to be quite dull and unexpressive. I’ll play around with different rosins but I’m not hopeful and am looking forward to wearing out this bow so I can justify replacing it with a student quality bow. I tried it and then swapped my strings and it was still underwhelming.
The difference between this and my other cheap bows has me really wanting to get a $200-500 bow to compare. Because it really is that significant of a difference.
If you cannot afford a higher quality bow I would risk one of their $50 bows before buying this one because it is the worst out of my 4 bows so far (I have used wood, fibreglass and carbon fibre).
For under $100 it gets the job done, just not as well as other sub $100 bows.
That said… this is a very subjective thing and it may work perfectly for your playing style and desired sound. It may also sound a lot better with a different cello.
Posted by Jonathan on Jun 27, 2022