# Bass Drum Pedal Drive Types: Chain vs Belt vs Direct Drive

> Chain, belt, and direct drive bass drum pedals compared — feel, response, and power transfer — and why extreme metal gravitates to direct drive pedals like Axis and the Pearl Demon Drive.

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## Chain drive: the metal default

Chain drive connects the footboard to the beater shaft (via the pedal's cam) with a metal chain, and has been the standard drive type since the 1970s — most pedals, in every genre, still use it. The chain has a small amount of natural flex, which gives a cushioned, forgiving feel that most drummers find comfortable and powerful. There is a tiny amount of lag, since every link in the chain is a point of contact, but it's microseconds and imperceptible to almost every player. Tama's Iron Cobra and Speed Cobra, DW's 5000 and 9000 Series, and Pearl's Eliminator are all chain drive, and together they cover the largest share of double pedals on the verified metal roster.

## Belt drive: a lighter middle ground

Belt drive replaces the chain with a nylon or composite belt. It's lighter and more responsive underfoot than chain drive, and — unlike a chain, which can bunch up on a very fast upstroke — a belt stays taut through rapid double strokes. It sits between chain and direct drive in feel: faster and lighter than chain, but without direct drive's complete rigidity. It's less common in modern metal than the other two types, showing up mostly on select boutique and hybrid pedal designs.

## Direct drive: zero slack, maximum speed

Direct drive pedals were actually the original bass drum pedal design, and they connect the footboard straight to the beater with a solid metal rod — no chain, no belt, no cam-driven slack of any kind. That rigid, "cam-less" connection gives the most immediate and consistent response of the three drive types, with far less unaccounted-for sideways flex than a chain or belt pedal. The trade-off is feel: direct drive is less forgiving and takes more technique adaptation for players used to chain drive's natural give, and direct-drive pedals tend to sit at a higher price point.

## Why extreme metal gravitates to direct drive

Direct drive's biggest advantage — instant, zero-lag transfer from foot to beater — matters most exactly where extreme metal lives: sustained, maximum-speed single-stroke and blast-beat patterns where even microscopic response lag compounds over hundreds of strokes per minute. That's why Axis, a brand built entirely around direct drive, and the Pearl Demon Drive (used across the verified roster by drummers including George Kollias, Gene Hoglan, and several black and death metal specialists) are the go-to choice for drummers chasing raw, sustained top-end speed, while chain drive remains the comfortable, versatile default for every other style of metal.

## Reference Table

| driveType | feel | response | examples |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Chain drive | Slight flex/give — a natural, slightly cushioned feel most drummers find comfortable. | A small amount of lag exists (every chain link is a point of contact), though it's effectively imperceptible in normal play. | Tama Iron Cobra, Tama Speed Cobra, DW 5000/9000 Series, Pearl Eliminator |
| Belt drive | Lighter and more responsive underfoot than chain — nylon or composite belts add strength without chain weight. | Faster than chain, won't "collapse" on the upstroke during rapid double strokes the way a slack chain can. | Select Axis and boutique pedal models |
| Direct drive | Rigid rod, zero slack — the most immediate, "cam-less" connection between footboard and beater. | The fastest and most consistent response of the three, with the least unaccounted-for sideways flex. | Axis (all models), Pearl Demon Drive, Pearl Demon XR, Trick Pro1-V, Trick Bigfoot, DW MDD |

*Table source: [Sweetwater InSync — Kick Pedal Drive Types Explained](https://www.sweetwater.com/insync/kick-pedal-drive-types-explained/)*

## FAQ

**Q: Direct drive vs chain pedal — which is better for metal?**
A: Neither is strictly "better." Chain drive gives a natural, slightly cushioned feel that most drummers find comfortable and is the metal default (Tama Iron Cobra, DW 9000). Direct drive removes all slack for the fastest, most consistent response, which is why extreme-speed specialists often prefer it (Axis, Pearl Demon Drive) — but it takes more technique adaptation and costs more.

**Q: What drive type does Axis use?**
A: Axis pedals are direct drive — the brand is built entirely around a solid-rod connection between footboard and beater rather than a chain or belt, which is part of why Axis pedals are common among extreme metal drummers chasing maximum, zero-lag response.

**Q: Is belt drive faster than chain drive?**
A: Belt drive is generally lighter and more responsive underfoot than chain drive, and a taut belt won't bunch up on a fast upstroke the way a slack chain sometimes can. It's still not as rigid or immediate as direct drive, and it's far less common than chain or direct drive in modern metal pedals.

## Sources

- [Sweetwater InSync — Kick Pedal Drive Types Explained](https://www.sweetwater.com/insync/kick-pedal-drive-types-explained/)
- [Sound Pure — Bass Drum Pedal Drive Types](https://www.soundpure.com/a/expert-advice/drums/bass-drum-pedal-drive-types/)

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*Last updated: 2026-07-12 · Source: [MetalForge.io](https://metalforge.io)*