Note: I paid for my pad used from a previous owner. I did not seek out a frreebie from Evans/D'Addario, as I doubt they would have sent one and I'm not one of the marching arts "pad bros".
It's all fine.
Here's my review.
*******
Wow.
I came into an Evans Attacktile pad in used condition (used as in,
previous owner dropped it, and the surface got dented in one corner). This pad retails new for forty dollars. I
paid eight bucks for mine.
After putting it through its paces, I can say that is the upper end of
its actual value.
The brush surface is nice, but the playing surface's size is far too small to be an effective brush practice surface.
Evans calls this a 10-inch pad. They get that measurement by running the tape diagonally from corner to corner through the center of the base. The true measurement of the playing surface when the tape is run from one straight to another through the middle of the pad is 9 inches. That's simply too small to be a truly useful brush surface.
The brush surface is a plastic laminate that appears to have been applied with
double-sided tape. It peels up with shockingly
little effort and doesn't stick quite as firmly when you press it back down.
The nonskid surface on the underside is a little less than 1 inch wide, which made be just enough to provide nonskid properties, but only barely. The threaded hole in the center of the underside allows this to be used on an 8mm threaded stand.
The only nice thing about this pad is how it feels with sticks, and it's very portable size. The
laminate over the gray rubber is nicely responsive with sticks, has good rebound and
doesn't feel like Formica.
But is it worth forty bucks new? In my opinion, not in the least. The overall construction is lackluster and pushes the boundary of what is acceptable quality for a pad in this pricepoint.
I am glad I got to try it for so little. I'll add it to the
stable for now, but later on I might re-glue the laminate before giving it to a
kid.
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