Here are my impressions of what I've tried...
Super 2 clear (7+5-mil) - very clear and open for a 2-ply head. These seem to work really well on smaller toms, where a thicker head might choke or sound dull, these sing a little better.
Response 2 clear (7+7-mil) - Nice tone, good feel. Your standard 2-ply head.
Performance 2 clear (7+7-mil) - two-ply with a sealed edge, like a Pinstripe. Solid, with a little more control than the Response 2. I liked these a lot on my birch tom toms, and I think they're great if you like to tune on the lower side.
Force 10 clear (10+10-mil) - I've only used this head on my lowest floor tom, and it works surprisingly well for getting a low, centered pitch without any need for additional muffling to control overtones. I'm only guessing but this would probably be overkill on anything smaller than (maybe) a 14" tom in my opinion.
Texture Coated and Texture Coated Reverse Dot (10-mil) - Your standard single ply head, both great for snare drums, but they both benefit from having Aquarian's unbreakable coating.
Texture Coated with Studio X ring (10-mil) If you aren't familiar the Studio X heads have a ring of dot material near the edge on the underside of the head. I really like this head on snares if you want a little overtone control but keep the feel of a regular single ply head. I've recently gone through a reverse dotted head phase, but I think I'm about to go back to the coated Studio X on my snares.
New Orleans Special (10-mil) - It's a clear head with a 13" dot on top. It's an...interesting head. It has the stiffness of a dotted head, but it doesn't have the dramatic change in tone you get when you change from playing on the dot to near the dot, since the dot takes up essentially the entire possible playing surface. Whether or not you'd like this head depends a lot on your feelings about the feel of dotted head, and your feelings about high overtones. Since it's just a plain old clear film at the edge there is almost no overtone suppression, making it both a lively and yet thick-feeling head all at once.
Reflector Coated (10+7-mil) - Has a rough dark gray coating for a unique look. I've tried it on a couple of my snares and it seems to work on overly ringy drums best, though if durability is a big concern this is definitely one of those "forever" kinds of heads.
Modern Vintage Medium (10-mil) - 1-ply with thick, rough, yellowish coating. Aquarian's take on faux-calfskin heads. They have boosted mids and feel a little heavier compared to Texture Coated. If you like a standard 1-ply but you want a little something more in the tone department these are great heads. I've played them tuned up bebop tight and Ringo loose and they sound great in any range.
Modern Vintage 2 (7+7-mil) - 2-ply with the vintage coating. If you prefer the feel of a 2-ply head but once again want a different, warmer and darker tone, these are great heads.
Deep Vintage 2 (10+10-mil) - I use these either for snares or the lowest-sounding floor tom. It's a lot of head, but it's surprisingly sensitive on snare drums, and (like the Force 10) leads to a low but controlled sound on big floor toms.