The present invention relates to an electronic drum pad.
A conventional example of an electronic drum pad is described, for example, in Non-Patent Literature 1. The electronic drum pad described in Non-Patent Literature 1 employs a mesh head. The mesh head is made of a net-like fabric woven with special threads. Since air passes through the net lattice, it is difficult for air vibrations to occur when the drum pad is struck, and the pad has superior low-noise characteristics (Non-Patent Literature 1).
The sense of striking, however, is sometimes different between electronic drum pads that employ a mesh head and acoustic drums. When the mesh head is struck, for example, rebounding of the drumsticks is larger than that with acoustic drums. Therefore, it may be difficult to allow stick rebound on acoustic drums to be reproduced well.
In addition, when a strike is applied to a peripheral area of the head of an acoustic drum, a sense of hard striking is obtained; when a strike is applied to a center area of the head, a sense of soft striking is obtained. It may be difficult to allow different senses of striking depending on the strike positions of the head of an acoustic drum to be reproduced well in a conventional electronic drum pad having a mesh head.
An object of the present invention is to provide an electronic drum pad that can successfully reproduce the sense of striking obtained at acoustic drums.
An electronic drum pad according to the present invention includes a drum shell; a mesh head stretched at an upper opening of the drum shell; a hard-resin sheet disposed adjacent to a rear surface of the mesh head and having a ring shape with an opening made at a center thereof; a cloth disposed adjacent to a rear surface of the hard-resin sheet; a strike absorbing member disposed adjacent to a rear surface of the cloth and formed by overlaying a plurality of sheets; and a tray disposed adjacent to a rear surface of the strike absorbing member and fitted into a lower opening of the drum shell.
According to an electronic drum pad of the present invention, the sense of striking obtained at acoustic drums can be reproduced successfully.
Embodiments of the present invention will be described below in detail.
The external shape of an electronic drum pad 1 according to a first embodiment will be described below by referring to
The internal structure of the electronic drum pad 1 according to the present embodiment will be described below by referring to
First Hard-Resin Sheet 105
The first hard-resin sheet 105 is a circular, thin, ring shaped sheet having the opening 105A, which is almost circular, at a center thereof. The opening 105A includes a cut 105B made partially toward the outside. The cut 105B is made to transfer high-pitched sound successfully to an edge sensor 130B, to be described later, when a strike is applied to a peripheral area of the head 11. Any hard resin can be used for the first hard-resin sheet 105. It is preferable to use polyethylene terephthalate (PET), for example. Other materials that can be used for the sheet 105 include high-density polyethylene (HDPE), hard polyvinyl chloride (PVC), polycarbonate (PC), acrylic (PMMA), and polypropylene (PP).
Since the first hard-resin sheet 105 is made of a hard resin, the electronic drum pad 1 can give a player a sense of hard striking when a peripheral area of the head 11, where the first hard-resin sheet 105 is positioned, is struck. In addition, since the opening 105A is made at a center area of the first hard-resin sheet 105, the electronic drum pad 1 can give a player a sense of non-hard striking when a center area of the head 11, where the opening 105A is positioned, is struck. Consequently, the sense of striking obtained on the electronic drum pad 1 is made close to that obtained on acoustic drums.
Cloth 110
The cloth 110 is a circular thin sheet having almost the same size as the first hard-resin sheet 105 and includes a cut 110A made inward at a part of the perimeter thereof. It is preferable to use a nonwoven fabric for the cloth 110. The cloth 110 is inserted between the first hard-resin sheet 105 and a porous resin sheet 115, to be described later, to prevent the generation of a hitting sound by these sheets when the electronic drum pad 1 is struck. In other words, the cloth 110 serves as a cushioning member (impact absorbing member) between the first hard-resin sheet 105 and the porous resin sheet 115.
Strike Absorbing Member 170
The strike absorbing member 170 suitably absorbs a strike mainly when the strike is applied to a center area of the mesh head 11, to adjust the sense of striking to a level neither too soft nor too hard to make the sense of striking close to that of acoustic drums when a center area of the head thereof is struck.
The strike absorbing member 170 is made by overlaying at least, sequentially from the mesh head 11, the porous resin sheet 115, a first rubber sheet 135, and a resin emulsion sheet 140. The strike absorbing member 170 further includes a second hard-resin sheet 120 and a second rubber sheet 125 inserted, sequentially from the mesh head 11 side, between the porous resin sheet 115 and the first rubber sheet 135.
Tray 145
The tray 145 has a circular dish shape and a raised rim surrounding at the perimeter thereof, and also includes a shallow indentation 145A close to the periphery of the tray 145. The tray 145 can be secured by being fitted into (caught at) the lower opening of the drum shell 12. Any hard strong resin can be used for the tray 145. It is preferable to use polycarbonate (PC), for example. Other materials that can be used for the tray 145 include polyethylene terephthalate (PET), high-density polyethylene (HDPE), hard polyvinyl chloride (PVC), acrylic (PMMA), and polypropylene (PP).
Porous Resin Sheet 115
The porous resin sheet 115 is a circular thin sheet having almost the same size as the first hard-resin sheet 105 and includes a cut 115A made inward at a part of the perimeter thereof. A porous resin material (soft resin or expanded resin having an extremely large number of fine holes inside) should be used for the porous resin sheet 115. It is preferable to use an ethylene propylene rubber (EPDM rubber sponge) for the porous resin sheet 115, for example. Other materials that can be used for the porous resin sheet 115 include natural rubber (NR sponge), a chloroprene rubber (CR sponge), a nitrile rubber (NBR sponge), a silicone rubber (Si rubber sponge), and a styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR sponge).
Since the porous resin sheet 115 is made of a porous resin, the electronic drum pad 1 is made to give a sense of striking close to the sense of soft striking obtained when a center area of the head of an acoustic drum is struck, and, at the same time, to enhance the low-noise characteristics.
First Rubber Sheet 135
The first rubber sheet 135 is a circular thin sheet having almost the same size as the first hard-resin sheet 105 and includes a cut 135A made inward at a part of the perimeter thereof. An elastic rubber should be used as the material for the first rubber sheet 135. It is preferable to use a chloroprene rubber (CR) for the first rubber sheet 135, for example. Other materials that can be used for the first rubber sheet 135 include a styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR), an isoprene rubber (IR), a butadiene rubber (BR), and an acrylonitrile butadiene rubber (NBR). A non-diene system synthetic rubber may be used, such as an isobutylene-isoprene rubber (IIR), an ethylene propylene rubber (EPM), an ethylene propylene rubber (EPDM), a silicone rubber (Si, Q), or a fluororubber (FKM).
Since the first rubber sheet 135 is made of an elastic rubber, a sense of hard striking is added to the sense of striking that becomes too soft due to the porous resin sheet 115, and the electronic drum pad 1 is made to give a sense of striking close to that obtained when a center area of the head of an acoustic drum is struck.
Resin Emulsion Sheet 140
The resin emulsion sheet 140 is a circular thin sheet having almost the same size as the first hard-resin sheet 105 and includes a cut 140A made inward at a part of the perimeter thereof. An acrylic resin emulsion should be used as the material for the resin emulsion sheet 140. The resin emulsion sheet 140 is bonded to the tray 145.
Since the resin emulsion sheet 140 is made of a resin emulsion (aqueous resin) and the resin emulsion sheet 140 is bonded to the tray 145, reverberation generated at the tray 145 when a strike is made is suppressed. The reverberation generated at the tray 145 causes noise in trigger detection at a center sensor 150D, to be described later, and makes the sound of a strike large. Since the resin emulsion sheet 140 is employed, the causes of noise in trigger detection are reduced and the low-noise characteristics are enhanced.
Second Hard-Resin Sheet 120
The second hard-resin sheet 120 is a circular thin sheet and is made smaller than the opening 105A of the first hard-resin sheet 105. The second hard-resin sheet 120 is disposed at a position where the shape made by projecting the second hard-resin sheet 120 from above is included in the shape made by projecting the opening 105A from above. The material used for the second hard-resin sheet 120 is the same as that for the first hard-resin sheet 105.
Second Rubber Sheet 125
The second rubber sheet 125 is a circular thin sheet and is made smaller than the opening 105A of the first hard-resin sheet 105. The second rubber sheet 125 is disposed at a position where the shape made by projecting the second rubber sheet 125 from above is included in the shape made by projecting the opening 105A from above. The material used for the second rubber sheet 125 is the same as that for the first rubber sheet 135.
Since the second hard-resin sheet 120 and the second rubber sheet 125 are made to have the sizes described above and are disposed at the positions described above, a sense of hard striking is added to the sense of striking at the center area, and the electronic drum pad 1 is made to have a sense of striking closer to that obtained when a center area of the head of an acoustic drum is struck. Since the second hard-resin sheet 120 and the second rubber sheet 125 are made to have the sizes described above and are disposed at the positions described above, center areas of the porous resin sheet 115 and the cloth 110 rise upward slightly. The opening 105A of the first hard-resin sheet 105 is fitted into these raised portions, making the first hard-resin sheet 105 closely contact with the cloth 110 for stable positioning. Consequently, the first hard-resin sheet 105 is prevented from rising, thus neither generating noise nor degrading the sense of striking.
Edge-Sensor Assembly 130
As shown in
The edge sensor 130B mainly detects high-pitched sound produced when a peripheral area of the electronic drum pad 1 is struck. The edge sensor 130B should be a piezoelectric device, for example. As described above, since the edge-sensor assembly 130 is sandwiched from above and below by the first hard-resin sheet 105 and the tray 145 to be fixed, high-pitched sound is detected successfully.
Center-Sensor Assembly 150
The center-sensor assembly 150 is secured to the rear surface of the tray 145. The center-sensor assembly 150 includes a plate 150A bonded to a center of the rear surface of the tray 145 via first porous members 150B and having a hole 150A-1 at a center thereof and a ring shape, and a center sensor 150D bonded to the rear surface of the plate 150A via a second porous member 150C. The center sensor 150D is bonded at a position other than that of the hole 150A-1. The materials for the first porous members 150B and the second porous member 150C should be urethane foam, for example.
The center sensor 150D mainly detects a strike made at a center area of the electronic drum pad 1. The center sensor 150D should be a piezoelectric device, for example. Since the center-sensor assembly 150 includes the plate 150A, vibrations generated in the tray 145 are easily transferred to the plate 150A irrespective of its position. Therefore, compared with a case in which the center sensor 150D is bonded directly to the tray 145, the center sensor 150D can respond to a larger region in the tray 145. In addition, since the hole 150A-1 is provided for the plate 150A and the center sensor 150D is bonded to the position different from that of the hole 150A-1, strain (noise) caused at a center of the tray 145 is prevented from being picked up.
Double-sided adhesive tape (double-sided adhesive sheets) or other parts may be used, if necessary, to bond the sheets or members described above to adjacent sheets or members.
Relationship with a WaveDrum System
A WaveDrum system detects the ratio between high-pitched sound generated when a peripheral area or rim of an electronic drum is struck and low-pitched sound generated when a center area thereof is struck, estimates the position of a strike on the basis of the ratio, simulates a tone on the basis of the estimated position of the strike, and generates sound of the simulated tone. To use the WaveDrum system, an electronic drum needs to be structured such that the ratio between high-pitched sound generated at a peripheral area of the electronic drum and low-pitched sound generated at a center area thereof changes continuously as the position of a strike changes.
As described above, in the present embodiment, since the first hard-resin sheet 105 is made of a hard resin and further, is disposed at the uppermost layer in the internal structure, high-pitched sound is generated when a peripheral area of the head is struck with a stick, and the ratio of high-pitched sound becomes smaller continuously and the ratio of low-pitched sound becomes larger continuously as the position of a strike approaches a center area of the head.
In addition, since the cloth 110 serves as the second layer in the internal structure, noise caused when the first hard-resin sheet 105 and the porous resin sheet 115 hit each other can be canceled out. Therefore, the tone of sound can be simulated at higher precision by the use of the WaveDrum system.
The external shape of an electronic drum pad 2 according to a second embodiment will be described below by referring to
The internal structure of the electronic drum pad 2 according to the present embodiment will be described below by referring to
Hard-Resin Sheet 205
The hard-resin sheet 205 is made of the same material as the first hard-resin sheet 105 used in the first embodiment. A cut at the opening is not made here.
Cloth 210
The cloth 210 is made of the same material as the cloth 110 used in the first embodiment. A cut is not made here because an edge-sensor assembly is not used in the electronic drum pad 2.
Strike Absorbing Member 250
The strike absorbing member 250 is made of the same materials as the strike absorbing member 170 used in the first embodiment, and is made by overlaying, sequentially from the mesh head 21, a porous resin sheet 215, a rubber sheet 220, and a resin emulsion sheet 225.
Porous Resin Sheet 215
The porous resin sheet 215 is made of the same material as the porous resin sheet 115 used in the first embodiment. A cut is not made here.
Rubber Sheet 220
The rubber sheet 220 is made of the same material as the first rubber sheet 135 used in the first embodiment. A cut is not made here.
Resin Emulsion Sheet 225
The resin emulsion sheet 225 is made of the same material as the resin emulsion sheet 140 used in the first embodiment. A cut is not made here.
Center-Sensor Assembly 235
The center-sensor assembly 235 is made of the same materials as the center-sensor assembly 150 used in the first embodiment. A plate 235A does not have a hole, and the center-sensor assembly 235 has a more simplified structure than the center-sensor assembly 50 used in the first embodiment. The center-sensor assembly 235 is secured to a position slightly shifted from the center of the rear surface of a tray 230 in order to detect, with a good balance, a signal made by a strike.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2018-002701 | Jan 2018 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5854436 | Wernick | Dec 1998 | A |
6121538 | Yoshino | Sep 2000 | A |
6326539 | Mishima | Dec 2001 | B1 |
6525249 | Suenaga | Feb 2003 | B1 |
7439432 | Hiraku | Oct 2008 | B2 |
8841527 | Shih | Sep 2014 | B2 |
8884151 | Lee | Nov 2014 | B1 |
8933315 | Marquez | Jan 2015 | B2 |
9099070 | Shih | Aug 2015 | B2 |
9424827 | Gill et al. | Aug 2016 | B2 |
20040149120 | Maruhashi | Aug 2004 | A1 |
20050022655 | Wise | Feb 2005 | A1 |
Entry |
---|
Alesis, “Crimson Mesh Kit: Five-Piece Electronic Drum Kit with Mesh Heads,” Jun. 2014. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20190213983 A1 | Jul 2019 | US |