Five-piece electronic drum kit with two crashes, ride, and hi-hat that mounts on an acoustic stand
Choose from 70 premium preset drum kits, including 20 new kits with custom samples
Three 10" PDX-8 mesh-head tom pads with head and rim triggering
Rugged and stable MDS-Compact stand
Expansion possibilities to support your unique playing and performance styles
Improve your sense of time with Time Check and Quiet Count in Coach mode
Product SKU:
rotd17kvx2s
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Yes, you would. Actually any midi-enabled device would get you that! It could be a midi keyboard or even cheaper drum pads from Amazon. This may be too much if you're looking just to dabble or get started.
I'm a drummer for 20+ years, I have this kit, and I love it!! I bought it from this same site around Xmas of 2022 for $1099 plus taxes and free shipping! If you're not a drummer, it may be overkill, but for me this was a Goldilocks kit. The real feel hi-hat is a game-changer, and the bigger snare is also great (I upgraded from a TD-11).
These kits have multiple trigger zones so that they can send more midi signals than cheaper kits, so the actual tones and effects you can get on a single pad strike are near indistinguishable from recording an acoustic set professionally (and the pads are velocity sensitive so that nothing feels robotic about what you hear on the other end). The cymbals (like the TD-11) are "choke-able" as well. The built-in sounds and songs are ok for practicing, and even good enough to use out of the box in a live setting (with tons of control capability for ambiance and other variables). Bottom line - great kit at a great price if you're a drummer. I have Superior Drummer, Addictive Drums, and Steven Slate for drum plugins that allow me way more kits and options to customize (more than I would ever need in 3 lifetimes) - works well and easily with all of them, and the abilities this kit offers when coupled with those plugins is outstanding for home recording.
I just got this a week ago. No regrets, especially at this price, but plan on another $350 for kick pedal, high hat stand, throne, sticks, and headphones if you need them. Used Capital One shopping for additional discount ($68).
Go try some drum set at the store and you will have a better feel for your needs. Glad I did not settle on Simmons or Alesis lower models
I'm primarily a guitar player
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If I wanted to run midi through DAW for a custom Kurt Ballou drum set, is this really worth it compared to say a 400$ alesis kit? Wouldn't you be able to get the same sounds through midi? (Guitar player getting into drums)
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If I wanted to run midi through DAW for a custom Kurt Ballou drum set, is this really worth it compared to say a 400$ alesis kit? Wouldn't you be able to get the same sounds through midi? (Guitar player getting into drums)
Yes, you would. Actually any midi-enabled device would get you that! It could be a midi keyboard or even cheaper drum pads from Amazon. This may be too much if you're looking just to dabble or get started.
I'm a drummer for 20+ years, I have this kit, and I love it!! I bought it from this same site around Xmas of 2022 for $1099 plus taxes and free shipping! If you're not a drummer, it may be overkill, but for me this was a Goldilocks kit. The real feel hi-hat is a game-changer, and the bigger snare is also great (I upgraded from a TD-11).
These kits have multiple trigger zones so that they can send more midi signals than cheaper kits, so the actual tones and effects you can get on a single pad strike are near indistinguishable from recording an acoustic set professionally (and the pads are velocity sensitive so that nothing feels robotic about what you hear on the other end). The cymbals (like the TD-11) are "choke-able" as well. The built-in sounds and songs are ok for practicing, and even good enough to use out of the box in a live setting (with tons of control capability for ambiance and other variables). Bottom line - great kit at a great price if you're a drummer. I have Superior Drummer, Addictive Drums, and Steven Slate for drum plugins that allow me way more kits and options to customize (more than I would ever need in 3 lifetimes) - works well and easily with all of them, and the abilities this kit offers when coupled with those plugins is outstanding for home recording.
Yes, you would. Actually any midi-enabled device would get you that! It could be a midi keyboard or even cheaper drum pads from Amazon. This may be too much if you're looking just to dabble or get started.
I'm a drummer for 20+ years, I have this kit, and I love it!! I bought it from this same site around Xmas of 2022 for $1099 plus taxes and free shipping! If you're not a drummer, it may be overkill, but for me this was a Goldilocks kit. The real feel hi-hat is a game-changer, and the bigger snare is also great (I upgraded from a TD-11).
These kits have multiple trigger zones so that they can send more midi signals than cheaper kits, so the actual tones and effects you can get on a single pad strike are near indistinguishable from recording an acoustic set professionally (and the pads are velocity sensitive so that nothing feels robotic about what you hear on the other end). The cymbals (like the TD-11) are "choke-able" as well. The built-in sounds and songs are ok for practicing, and even good enough to use out of the box in a live setting (with tons of control capability for ambiance and other variables). Bottom line - great kit at a great price if you're a drummer. I have Superior Drummer, Addictive Drums, and Steven Slate for drum plugins that allow me way more kits and options to customize (more than I would ever need in 3 lifetimes) - works well and easily with all of them, and the abilities this kit offers when coupled with those plugins is outstanding for home recording.
If I wanted to run midi through DAW for a custom Kurt Ballou drum set, is this really worth it compared to say a 400$ alesis kit? Wouldn't you be able to get the same sounds through midi? (Guitar player getting into drums)
I just got this a week ago. No regrets, especially at this price, but plan on another $350 for kick pedal, high hat stand, throne, sticks, and headphones if you need them. Used Capital One shopping for additional discount ($68).
Go try some drum set at the store and you will have a better feel for your needs. Glad I did not settle on Simmons or Alesis lower models
Bought this kit on the last iconian deal and couldn't be happier with it! The bluetooth connects instantly to my phone once I turn on the unit. You can individually mix the audio from your phone + each individual drum to really get it sounding crisp in the headphones. Then I go on YouTube and jam out to all the drumless versions of my favorite songs. I just can't stop playing this thing it's soooo fun. FYI I had to sign for the package when UPS delivered it.
Last edited by NickyTheWrench June 16, 2024 at 12:43 PM.
Yes, you would. Actually any midi-enabled device would get you that! It could be a midi keyboard or even cheaper drum pads from Amazon. This may be too much if you're looking just to dabble or get started.
I'm a drummer for 20+ years, I have this kit, and I love it!! I bought it from this same site around Xmas of 2022 for $1099 plus taxes and free shipping! If you're not a drummer, it may be overkill, but for me this was a Goldilocks kit. The real feel hi-hat is a game-changer, and the bigger snare is also great (I upgraded from a TD-11).
These kits have multiple trigger zones so that they can send more midi signals than cheaper kits, so the actual tones and effects you can get on a single pad strike are near indistinguishable from recording an acoustic set professionally (and the pads are velocity sensitive so that nothing feels robotic about what you hear on the other end). The cymbals (like the TD-11) are "choke-able" as well. The built-in sounds and songs are ok for practicing, and even good enough to use out of the box in a live setting (with tons of control capability for ambiance and other variables). Bottom line - great kit at a great price if you're a drummer. I have Superior Drummer, Addictive Drums, and Steven Slate for drum plugins that allow me way more kits and options to customize (more than I would ever need in 3 lifetimes) - works well and easily with all of them, and the abilities this kit offers when coupled with those plugins is outstanding for home recording.
Hi, I'm not a drummer, but a guitarist. Was looking at the TD-27KV2 when it was $2700. Looking at the two, the TD-27KV2's drums look a lot closer to an acoustic set, whereas these look more like practice pads. Do you think the shape of these would cause you to change the way you strike the pads? If you learned on these, would you feel perfectly at home on an acoustic set?
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Hi, I'm not a drummer, but a guitarist. Was looking at the TD-27KV2 when it was $2700. Looking at the two, the TD-27KV2's drums look a lot closer to an acoustic set, whereas these look more like practice pads. Do you think the shape of these would cause you to change the way you strike the pads? If you learned on these, would you feel perfectly at home on an acoustic set?
Another guitar player here. Take a look at the rack mounts vs acoustic set ups with floor toms ect... Id say your best best is to go into a music store and feel out everything in person and talk to the drummers.
The rack is made for a small child. The module sounds are very mediocre, also no midi in gimps the module. The pads are the worst from Roland with the plastic ring making it a smaller surface to hit. It would be an okay beginner kit if it was under $1000
The rack is made for a small child. The module sounds are very mediocre, also no midi in gimps the module. The pads are the worst from Roland with the plastic ring making it a smaller surface to hit. It would be an okay beginner kit if it was under $1000
It has midi in/out and audio through the USB port These are mesh pads, definitely not the worst as you might find on models < TD17. It is the compact rack though.
This is a great kit. I bought one last year from one of those Amazon returns auction sites new and unopened, but likely returned because it was missing the second box should have shipped alongside it (the rack). Paid $500 + fees. Two weeks later the rack (also unopened) showed up on the same site and I snagged it for $30. Easily the slickest deal I've gotten on an instrument.
To parrot another commenter, absolutely "plan on another $350 for kick pedal, high hat stand, throne, sticks, and headphones if you need them". You don't have to go nuts on high end stuff though. I ended up with a Tama Iron Cobra 200 HH stand and a DW 2000 kick for $100 each, a $50 PDP throne, and heavily discounted beyerdynamic DT 770 PRO headphones.
When you have $300, I HIGHLY recommend getting a Roland MDS-Standard 2 rack. Roland has an issue where their tech all costs and performs similarly so they have to intentionally decapitate the lower end lines to justify having pricing tiers. The decapitation on this model is a very cramped rack.
Get the rack made for the TD-27 and TD-50 kits and you'll be more comfortable and the kit will look closer to the flagship models.
Kick Pad (KD-10) is not listed in the description, whats in the box. So no kick drum and no hi-hat stand?
Drum Sound Module (TD-17)
Snare V-Pad (PDX-12)3x
Tom V-Pads (PDX-8)
2x Crash (CY-12C-T)
Ride (CY-14R-T)
Drum Stand (MDS-COMPACT)
Sound Module Mount
AC Adapter
Special Connection Cable
Connection Cable (Crash2)
Drum Key
User Manual
Roland 1 Year Limited Warranty
Kick Pad (KD-10) is not listed in the description, whats in the box. So no kick drum and no hi-hat stand?
Drum Sound Module (TD-17)
Snare V-Pad (PDX-12)3x
Tom V-Pads (PDX-8)
2x Crash (CY-12C-T)
Ride (CY-14R-T)
Drum Stand (MDS-COMPACT)
Sound Module Mount
AC Adapter
Special Connection Cable
Connection Cable (Crash2)
Drum Key
User Manual
Roland 1 Year Limited Warranty
Mine came with the kick pad, just not the pedal. You also need to get your own hi-hat stand
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Hi, I'm not a drummer, but a guitarist. Was looking at the TD-27KV2 when it was $2700. Looking at the two, the TD-27KV2's drums look a lot closer to an acoustic set, whereas these look more like practice pads. Do you think the shape of these would cause you to change the way you strike the pads? If you learned on these, would you feel perfectly at home on an acoustic set?
I would say that, if you're just learning the drums, the shape and size of the pads will have little to do with your success. So much about drumming relies on sticking, finger and wrist technique, timing and consistency, balance, and coordination that things like pad angles or sizes are largely irrelevant until you learn the basics. A good drummer will sound good on buckets and trash cans.
EDIT: To clearly answer your questions:
Do you think the shape of these would cause you to change the way you strike the pads? No - I don't think it matters much.
If you learned on these, would you feel perfectly at home on an acoustic set? Yes. I'd actually encourage anyone to learn and practice WITHOUT a kit if you're just staring out. Grab a practice pad or even sticks and a pillow, or your hands on a table.
I will say that most electronic kits will feel smaller than an acoustic kit. The TD17 is no different. If you want the feel and look of an acoustic kit, there's a whole different line of v-drums that Roland makes at multiple levels that come into play.
That said, if you have the budget and find value in the features, go as big as you want! I didn't find the TD27 differences enough to justify the substantial price jump, but it also depends on what you find valuable and what you're trying to accomplish with the kit. For me, the TD17 was definitely better than many lower level kits and struck that balance of "just enough" hi-end features at a really good price point if you're looking $1500 or less. I didn't see other kits that offered the same combination of features and quality in that price range. I also loved my TD11, so the upgrade made sense for me. I don't regret my purchase.
Last edited by SlickyDeally June 19, 2024 at 10:30 AM.
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I'm a drummer for 20+ years, I have this kit, and I love it!! I bought it from this same site around Xmas of 2022 for $1099 plus taxes and free shipping! If you're not a drummer, it may be overkill, but for me this was a Goldilocks kit. The real feel hi-hat is a game-changer, and the bigger snare is also great (I upgraded from a TD-11).
These kits have multiple trigger zones so that they can send more midi signals than cheaper kits, so the actual tones and effects you can get on a single pad strike are near indistinguishable from recording an acoustic set professionally (and the pads are velocity sensitive so that nothing feels robotic about what you hear on the other end). The cymbals (like the TD-11) are "choke-able" as well. The built-in sounds and songs are ok for practicing, and even good enough to use out of the box in a live setting (with tons of control capability for ambiance and other variables). Bottom line - great kit at a great price if you're a drummer. I have Superior Drummer, Addictive Drums, and Steven Slate for drum plugins that allow me way more kits and options to customize (more than I would ever need in 3 lifetimes) - works well and easily with all of them, and the abilities this kit offers when coupled with those plugins is outstanding for home recording.
Go try some drum set at the store and you will have a better feel for your needs. Glad I did not settle on Simmons or Alesis lower models
I'm primarily a guitar player
16 Comments
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank SlickyDeally
I'm a drummer for 20+ years, I have this kit, and I love it!! I bought it from this same site around Xmas of 2022 for $1099 plus taxes and free shipping! If you're not a drummer, it may be overkill, but for me this was a Goldilocks kit. The real feel hi-hat is a game-changer, and the bigger snare is also great (I upgraded from a TD-11).
These kits have multiple trigger zones so that they can send more midi signals than cheaper kits, so the actual tones and effects you can get on a single pad strike are near indistinguishable from recording an acoustic set professionally (and the pads are velocity sensitive so that nothing feels robotic about what you hear on the other end). The cymbals (like the TD-11) are "choke-able" as well. The built-in sounds and songs are ok for practicing, and even good enough to use out of the box in a live setting (with tons of control capability for ambiance and other variables). Bottom line - great kit at a great price if you're a drummer. I have Superior Drummer, Addictive Drums, and Steven Slate for drum plugins that allow me way more kits and options to customize (more than I would ever need in 3 lifetimes) - works well and easily with all of them, and the abilities this kit offers when coupled with those plugins is outstanding for home recording.
I'm a drummer for 20+ years, I have this kit, and I love it!! I bought it from this same site around Xmas of 2022 for $1099 plus taxes and free shipping! If you're not a drummer, it may be overkill, but for me this was a Goldilocks kit. The real feel hi-hat is a game-changer, and the bigger snare is also great (I upgraded from a TD-11).
These kits have multiple trigger zones so that they can send more midi signals than cheaper kits, so the actual tones and effects you can get on a single pad strike are near indistinguishable from recording an acoustic set professionally (and the pads are velocity sensitive so that nothing feels robotic about what you hear on the other end). The cymbals (like the TD-11) are "choke-able" as well. The built-in sounds and songs are ok for practicing, and even good enough to use out of the box in a live setting (with tons of control capability for ambiance and other variables). Bottom line - great kit at a great price if you're a drummer. I have Superior Drummer, Addictive Drums, and Steven Slate for drum plugins that allow me way more kits and options to customize (more than I would ever need in 3 lifetimes) - works well and easily with all of them, and the abilities this kit offers when coupled with those plugins is outstanding for home recording.
Go try some drum set at the store and you will have a better feel for your needs. Glad I did not settle on Simmons or Alesis lower models
I'm primarily a guitar player
I'm a drummer for 20+ years, I have this kit, and I love it!! I bought it from this same site around Xmas of 2022 for $1099 plus taxes and free shipping! If you're not a drummer, it may be overkill, but for me this was a Goldilocks kit. The real feel hi-hat is a game-changer, and the bigger snare is also great (I upgraded from a TD-11).
These kits have multiple trigger zones so that they can send more midi signals than cheaper kits, so the actual tones and effects you can get on a single pad strike are near indistinguishable from recording an acoustic set professionally (and the pads are velocity sensitive so that nothing feels robotic about what you hear on the other end). The cymbals (like the TD-11) are "choke-able" as well. The built-in sounds and songs are ok for practicing, and even good enough to use out of the box in a live setting (with tons of control capability for ambiance and other variables). Bottom line - great kit at a great price if you're a drummer. I have Superior Drummer, Addictive Drums, and Steven Slate for drum plugins that allow me way more kits and options to customize (more than I would ever need in 3 lifetimes) - works well and easily with all of them, and the abilities this kit offers when coupled with those plugins is outstanding for home recording.
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To parrot another commenter, absolutely "plan on another $350 for kick pedal, high hat stand, throne, sticks, and headphones if you need them". You don't have to go nuts on high end stuff though. I ended up with a Tama Iron Cobra 200 HH stand and a DW 2000 kick for $100 each, a $50 PDP throne, and heavily discounted beyerdynamic DT 770 PRO headphones.
Get the rack made for the TD-27 and TD-50 kits and you'll be more comfortable and the kit will look closer to the flagship models.
Drum Sound Module (TD-17)
Snare V-Pad (PDX-12)3x
Tom V-Pads (PDX-8)
2x Crash (CY-12C-T)
Ride (CY-14R-T)
Drum Stand (MDS-COMPACT)
Sound Module Mount
AC Adapter
Special Connection Cable
Connection Cable (Crash2)
Drum Key
User Manual
Roland 1 Year Limited Warranty
Drum Sound Module (TD-17)
Snare V-Pad (PDX-12)3x
Tom V-Pads (PDX-8)
2x Crash (CY-12C-T)
Ride (CY-14R-T)
Drum Stand (MDS-COMPACT)
Sound Module Mount
AC Adapter
Special Connection Cable
Connection Cable (Crash2)
Drum Key
User Manual
Roland 1 Year Limited Warranty
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
EDIT: To clearly answer your questions:
Do you think the shape of these would cause you to change the way you strike the pads? No - I don't think it matters much.
If you learned on these, would you feel perfectly at home on an acoustic set? Yes. I'd actually encourage anyone to learn and practice WITHOUT a kit if you're just staring out. Grab a practice pad or even sticks and a pillow, or your hands on a table.
I will say that most electronic kits will feel smaller than an acoustic kit. The TD17 is no different. If you want the feel and look of an acoustic kit, there's a whole different line of v-drums that Roland makes at multiple levels that come into play.
That said, if you have the budget and find value in the features, go as big as you want! I didn't find the TD27 differences enough to justify the substantial price jump, but it also depends on what you find valuable and what you're trying to accomplish with the kit. For me, the TD17 was definitely better than many lower level kits and struck that balance of "just enough" hi-end features at a really good price point if you're looking $1500 or less. I didn't see other kits that offered the same combination of features and quality in that price range. I also loved my TD11, so the upgrade made sense for me. I don't regret my purchase.
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