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V-Drums (Virtual Drums) are a line of
electronic drum Electronic drums is a modern electronic musical instrument, primarily designed to serve as an alternative to an acoustic drum kit. Electronic drums consist of an electronic sound module which produces the synthesized or sampled percussion sounds ...
s by
Roland Corporation is a Japanese manufacturer of electronic musical instruments, electronic equipment, and software. It was founded by Ikutaro Kakehashi in Osaka on 18 April 1972. In 2005, its headquarters relocated to Hamamatsu in Shizuoka Prefecture. It has fact ...
Introduced originally in 1997.


Trigger types

V-Drums trigger devices are of four major types: mesh-head drum pads, rubber pads, cymbal pads and acoustic drum triggers. Mesh-head pads look very similar to acoustic drums, and attempt to emulate their feel. The simpler, more generic type is a rubber pad, which is less expensive, but also looks and feels less like an acoustic drum. There are several models of cymbal pads (also called V-Cymbals). The more expensive ones attempt to emulate the physical properties of acoustic cymbals of various types (e.g.:
hi-hat A hi-hat (hihat, high-hat, etc.) is a combination of two cymbals and a pedal, all mounted on a metal stand. It is a part of the standard drum kit used by drummers in many styles of music including rock, pop, jazz, and blues. Hi-hats consist o ...
, crash, ride), while the simpler, less expensive cymbal pads are less realistic. Acoustic drum triggers can be used to provide trigger signals from standard acoustic drums. From an electrical point of view, trigger pads can be of the following types: * ''Mono Pads'', using ''one''
Piezoelectric sensor A piezoelectric sensor is a device that uses the piezoelectric effect to measure changes in pressure, acceleration, temperature, strain, or force by converting them to an electrical charge. The prefix ''piezo-'' is Greek for 'press' or 'squeeze'. ...
for the head. Usually kick-drum pads or older and less expensive pads. * ''Stereo Pads'', using ''one'' piezo sensor for the head and an additional switch for the rim. If the rim switch is triggered, the signal strength is determined by the head's piezo sensor. Mostly rubber pads and cymbal pads. * ''Stereo Pads'' using ''two'' piezo sensors, one for the head and one for the rim. Mostly mesh-head pads. * ''Three-way Pads'' using one piezo sensor and ''two'' switches. Roland's three-way cymbal pads (CY-12R/C, CY-13R and CY-15R) work this way, the piezo triggers the bow, and the switches trigger edge and bell.


Rubber pads

Round rubber pads were introduced with the TD-7 drum module in 1992 (previous Roland pads were polygonal) and were universally used as trigger pads for drums and cymbals. Since the introduction of mesh-head drum pads and cymbal-shaped trigger pads, standard rubber pads are only used as tom-tom and (until recently) bass drum trigger pads on Roland's less expensive drum kits. More expensive kits don't include any rubber pads at all any more. The downsides of rubber pads are their less realistic rebound and their relatively high
ambient noise level In atmospheric sounding and noise pollution, ambient noise level (sometimes called background noise level, reference sound level, or room noise level) is the background sound pressure level at a given location, normally specified as a reference l ...
(compared to mesh-head pads), but their lower price, and increased durability, still makes them a better choice in some cases.


Cloth-head pads

Cloth-head drum pads were introduced with the KD-9 in 2011, using a cloth-like material as the drum head with an underlying, relatively thick layer of foam. These pads are softer than rubber pads and feel more realistic, while producing less ambient noise. They are only available in small sizes though, and the head tension cannot be adjusted like on mesh-head pads.


Mesh-head pads

Roland V-Drums mesh-head triggers resemble acoustic drums in both appearance and feel. The striking surface is a two-layer taut woven mesh of fibers fitted with several electronic sensors. This allows the mesh-head trigger to respond to the play of a drumstick in a manner that feels more like real drums than their earlier rubber predecessors. Roland developers have stated that the design of the mesh-head V-Pad was inspired in part by a small toy trampoline. In 1997, Roland developed and patented an updated version of mesh-head drum triggers, a key feature of the V-Drums line. As such, the name "V-Drums" sometimes refers specifically to Roland's mesh-head based drum triggers. The company began marketing the mesh-head triggers under the "V-Drums" name in 1997, in conjunction with the TD-10 drum module. Most Roland mesh-head V-Drums have a playable rim which have their own electronic sensors (and corresponding sounds) - exceptions being the PD-100, PD-80, and mesh head drums on the HD series of kits, which only have a single head sensor. V-Drums and other electronic drum products have taken substantial market share from acoustic drums due to advances in electronic drum technology that have improved the value proposition of electronic drums over acoustic. Electronic drum kits, especially mesh-head based ones, make significantly less ambient noise than acoustic drum kits and mesh heads provide a playing feel more similar to acoustic drums than non-mesh electronic pads (typically rubber). Mesh heads used in V-Drums kits today are made by the American drumhead company Remo.


Acoustic drum triggers

Roland also makes acoustic drum triggers, which can be mounted on the rims of standard acoustic drums and provide a trigger signal from those drums, effectively turning them into trigger pads. The acoustic drumhead can either be left on the drum, to get the acoustic sound as well as a trigger signal, or the drumhead can be replaced with a mesh-head to lower ambient noise, if only the trigger signal is needed.


Cymbal pads

In the early 2000s, Roland moved away from using standard rubber pads as cymbal triggers and introduced new cymbal-shaped trigger pads with a rubber surface, which they call ''V-Cymbals''. The more expensive cymbal pads can swing freely after being hit (only rotation of the pad is prevented by a special cymbal mount), so they feel more like real cymbals, while the less expensive cymbal pads are not movable and always stay in their fixed position, thus feeling less realistic. Some of the movable pads also feature a third ''bell'' zone, which is triggered when hitting the bell area of the cymbal pad. These cymbal pads are called three-way cymbals because of their three trigger zones (bell, bow and edge).


Electronic hi-hats

Electronic hi-hats are always made up of two components: a trigger pad to detect hits, and a variable resistor-based hi-hat controller to detect the foot position, so the drum module can determine whether the hi-hat is supposed to be open or closed (or somewhere in between). The simpler, less expensive solution uses a simple fixed V-Cymbal pad in combination with a separate foot pedal controller, which allows the drum module to replicate the ''sound'' of a hi-hat, but does not emulate the feel and scope of expressiveness of acoustic hi-hats. The more expensive V-Hi-Hats integrate trigger pad and controller into a set of two opposing pieces, designed to be mounted on a conventional hi-hat stand. Because the hi-hat pad moves with the position of the pedal and can swing freely when the hi-hat is opened, this solution is more similar to a traditional acoustic hi-hat. The most complex and most expensive VH-13 V-Hi-Hat and the older VH-12 can also detect different amounts of foot pressure in the closed position, but they are only compatible with the TD-30 and the older TD-12 and TD-20 drum modules. The simpler VH-11 can be used with more modules, but it cannot sense foot pressure in the closed position.


Roland drum modules

Roland drum modules range in features and price from the top-of-the-line TD-50 to the TD-27, TD-17, TD-07, TD-4, TD-1 and HD-3. Higher model numbers denote more advanced models, while lower numbers are used for less expensive ones.


Available drum modules


Availability Timeline

ImageSize = width:960 height:auto barincrement:20 PlotArea = left:100 bottom:120 top:0 right:15 Alignbars = justify DateFormat = yyyy Period = from:1991 till:2023 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal format:yyyy Legend = orientation:vertical position:bottom columns:3 Colors = id:DModuleTop value:rgb(0.7,0,0) legend:Flagship_Drum_Module id:DModuleAdv value:red legend:Advanced_Drum_Module id:DModuleMid value:orange legend:Mid-Level_Drum_Module id:DModuleEntry value:yellow2 legend:Entry_Level_Drum_Module id:DModulePort value:blue legend:Drum_Module_for_Small/Portable_Sets id:DModuleLite value:powderblue legend:Drum_Module_for_Lite_Sets id:DModuleOld value:lightpurple legend:Older_Drum_Module id:TModule value:teal legend:Trigger_Module id:COSM value:gray(0.75) legend:COSM_introduced id:SuperNatural value:gray(0.5) legend:SuperNATURAL_introduced id:bars value:gray(0.95) id:major value:gray(0.85) id:minor value:gray(0.85) BackgroundColors = bars:bars ScaleMajor = gridcolor:major increment:1 start:1991 ScaleMinor = gridcolor:minor unit:year increment:1 start:1991 LineData = at:1997 color:COSM layer:back at:2012 color:SuperNatural layer:back BarData = bar:HD1 text:"HD-1" bar:HD3 text:"HD-3" bar:TD1 text:"TD-1" bar:TD02 text:"TD-02" bar:TD3 text:"TD-3" bar:TD4 text:"TD-4" bar:TD5 text:"TD-5" bar:TD6 text:"TD-6" bar:TD6V text:"TD-6V" bar:TD7 text:"TD-7" bar:TD07 text:"TD-07" bar:TD8 text:"TD-8" bar:TD9 text:"TD-9" bar:TD10 text:"TD-10" bar:TDW10 text:"TD-10+TDW-1" bar:TD11 text:"TD-11" bar:TD12 text:"TD-12" bar:TD15 text:"TD-15" bar:TD17 text:"TD-17" bar:TD20 text:"TD-20" bar:TDW20 text:"TD-20X/TDW-20" bar:TD25 text:"TD-25" bar:TD27 text:"TD-27" bar:TD30 text:"TD-30" bar:TD50 text:"TD-50" bar:TD50X text:"TD-50X" bar:TM2 text:"TM-2" bar:TM6P text:"TM-6 Pro" bar:TMC6 text:"TMC-6" PlotData= width:10 textcolor:black align:left anchor:from shift:(3,-4) bar:HD1 from:2007 till:2012 color:DModuleLite text:"HD-1" bar:HD3 from:2012 till:2018 color:DModuleLite text:"HD-3" bar:TD1 from:2014 till:end color:DModulePort text:"TD-1" bar:TD3 from:2004 till:2009 color:DModuleEntry text:"TD-3" bar:TD4 from:2009 till:2012 color:DModuleEntry text:"TD-4" bar:TD4 from:2012 till:2016 color:DModulePort text:"TD-4KP" bar:TD5 from:1994 till:2001 color:DModuleOld text:"TD-5" bar:TD6 from:2001 till:2003 color:DModuleMid text:"TD-6" bar:TD6V from:2003 till:2008 color:DModuleMid text:"TD-6V" bar:TD7 from:1992 till:1999 color:DModuleOld text:"TD-7" bar:TD07 from:2020 till:end color:DModuleEntry text:"TD-07" bar:TD8 from:1999 till:2005 color:DModuleAdv text:"TD-8" bar:TD9 from:2008 till:2012 color:DModuleMid text:"TD-9" bar:TD9 at:2011 mark:(line,white) text:"v2.0" bar:TD10 from:1997 till:2000 color:DModuleTop text:"TD-10" bar:TDW10 from:2000 till:2004 color:DModuleTop text:"TD-10+TDW-1" bar:TD11 from:2012 till:2018 color:DModuleEntry text:"TD-11" bar:TD12 from:2005 till:2012 color:DModuleAdv text:"TD-12" bar:TD15 from:2012 till:2015 color:DModuleMid text:"TD-15" bar:TD17 from:2018 till:end color:DModuleMid text:"TD-17" bar:TD20 from:2004 till:2008 color:DModuleTop text:"TD-20" bar:TDW20 from:2008 till:2012 color:DModuleTop text:"TD-20X/TDW-20" bar:TD25 from:2015 till:2020 color:DModuleMid text:"TD-25" bar:TD27 from:2020 till:end color:DModuleAdv text:"TD-27" bar:TD30 from:2012 till:2016 color:DModuleTop text:"TD-30" bar:TD50 from:2016 till:end color:DModuleTop text:"TD-50" bar:TD50X from:2021 till:end color:DModuleTop text:"TD-50X" bar:TM2 from:2014 till:end color:TModule text:"TM-2" bar:TM6P from:2018 till:end color:TModule text:"TM-6 Pro" bar:TMC6 from:2002 till:2015 color:TModule text:"TMC-6"


References


External links


Roland V-Drums Official Portal
{{Roland Drums Electronic musical instruments