The Alesis SR-16 is a drum machine used by songwriters and musicians. It can be purchased on the Alesis website, or from music stores such as Long & McQuade who have both a brick and mortar store and an online retail shop.
This is a very good question and interesting to note there are no answers so far. In my opinion no manufacturer has ever really tried very hard to include decent country sounds in their machines. The best I know of is still the Alesis SR 16. If there are folks out there who have better suggestions I too would be delighted to hear more.
There is no way to load the preset patterns from an SR-16 into FL Studio. The SR-16 used a cassette tape for data backup, and did not transmit samples or Sysex by MIDI. You can record the audio out of the SR-16 one pad at a time, as well as recording the sound of the patterns. You won't be able to edit the patterns recorded like you can with other sounds in FL Studio.
The 20-lug drum will hold tune better because it tensions the head more evenly. A 16-lug bass drum is easier to tune because there are fewer lugs.
Smurfs - 1981 The Royal Drum 6-16 is rated/received certificates of: Australia:G
It’s on the sock monkeys lap. It’s a tiny red drum.
The Drum Dancers of Java - 1918 was released on: USA: 16 February 1918
The Fresh Beat Band - 2009 Drum Party 2-16 was released on: USA: 10 March 2011
The standard sizes for drums are: 22" x 16" bass drum, 12" x 10" rack tom, 13" x 11" rack tom, 16" x 16" floor tom and a 14" x 5.5" snare drum. Snare, tom and bass drum sizes are commonly expressed as diameter x depth, both in inches, for example 14 x 5 is a common snare drum size. So the circumference is just Pi, which we approximate as 3.14 x diameter.
Usually 16 or 20. But it could vary.
They vary depending on the drum kit, but the standard sizes are 12", 13", 14", 16", and 22" for the rack toms, snare, floor tom, and bass drum.
14" Snare 12" & 13" Toms 14" & 16" Floor toms 22" Bass drum