# How to Set Up and Tune a Bass Drum Pedal for Metal

> Bass pedal spring tension, beater choice and angle (felt vs plastic vs wood), and longboard vs standard footboard length — including Tama Speed Cobra vs Iron Cobra.

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## Spring tension: control vs speed

Spring tension is the first thing most drummers adjust, and it's largely a trade-off: looser tension gives more control at the cost of some rebound speed, while tighter tension gives faster rebound because the spring does more of the work bringing the beater back — useful for sustained straight sixteenths, but demanding more precise foot control. Many metal drummers chasing raw speed and endurance run their tension cranked high so the pedal does more of the work; others — including plenty of double-bass metal players — prefer a lower tension specifically because the added control outweighs the small speed cost. There's no universal "correct" setting; it comes down to technique and how much of the rebound you want the spring doing versus your foot.

## Beater choice and angle

Beater material changes the pedal's tone as much as the drum itself. Felt gives a warm, rounded thud with minimal attack. Plastic gives a bright, defined, cutting attack — the standard choice behind most modern recorded metal kick tones, since a hard surface reads as brighter and sharper the harder it gets. Wood sits between the two: articulate and punchy, with a darker, more scooped tone than plastic. Beater angle matters too — a higher (more vertical) resting angle means a shorter stroke and a harder impact, favoring power, while a lower angle means a longer stroke with more speed potential; most metal drummers land on a mid-to-high angle as the balance point.

## Footboard length: longboard vs standard

The other major setup variable is footboard length. A standard-length footboard (e.g. the Tama Iron Cobra) is the traditional size; a longboard (e.g. the Tama Speed Cobra) extends that length and moves the nose of the board back from the bass drum. A longer footboard is effectively a longer lever, so less foot strength is needed to move the beater — minimizing the effort per stroke, which is why longboards are associated with faster footwork and heel-toe technique. The trade-off is a slightly lighter feel that some drummers find gives up a touch of raw power compared to a standard board's more direct leverage.

## Reference Table

| material | tone | metalRole |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Felt | Warm, rounded thud with minimal attack — more boom than punch. | Common on warmer, less aggressive metal tones where body matters more than cut. |
| Plastic (hard) | Defined, bright, cutting attack that sits clearly in a mix. | The standard modern-metal choice — the "click" most recorded metal kick tones are built around. |
| Wood | Articulate and punchy with a darker tone, scooped mids and strong highs/lows. | Used for a harder-edged, more percussive attack than felt without going as bright as plastic. |

*Table source: [Sweetwater InSync — Different Types of Bass Drum Beaters](https://www.sweetwater.com/insync/different-types-of-bass-drum-beaters/)*

## FAQ

**Q: What spring tension is best for metal bass pedals?**
A: There's no single correct setting — it's a control-vs-speed trade-off. Higher tension gives faster rebound and lets the spring do more of the work, which many speed-focused metal drummers prefer for sustained sixteenths. Lower tension gives more control and is often preferred by drummers who value precision over the small speed gain, including plenty of double-bass metal players.

**Q: What is a longboard pedal?**
A: A longboard is an extended-length footboard — the Tama Speed Cobra is the best-known metal example, versus the standard-length board on a pedal like the Tama Iron Cobra. The extra length acts as a longer lever, needing less foot strength per stroke, which suits fast footwork and heel-toe technique at a slight cost to raw power.

**Q: Felt vs plastic beater — which is better for metal?**
A: Plastic beaters give a brighter, more defined, cutting attack and are the standard behind most modern recorded metal kick tones. Felt beaters give a warmer, rounder thud with less attack. Wood sits in between, with a darker, punchier tone than plastic. The choice is about the tone you want, not a right-or-wrong answer.

## Sources

- [Sweetwater InSync — Different Types of Bass Drum Beaters](https://www.sweetwater.com/insync/different-types-of-bass-drum-beaters/)
- [Drumming Base — Bass Drum Pedal Spring Tension: How to Get the Right Setup](https://drummingbase.com/bass-drum-pedal-spring-tension-how-to-get-the-right-setup/)
- [Drumstrive — Iron Cobra vs Speed Cobra: Which Tama Pedal Should You Buy?](https://drumstrive.com/iron-cobra-vs-speed-cobra/)

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- [Live page](https://metalforge.io/pedals/setup-tuning)
- [Pedals Guide](https://metalforge.io/llms/pedals.md)
- [All LLM Resources](https://metalforge.io/llms/index.md)

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