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AzN_jErK
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140. PostPosted: Mon Feb 03, 2003 4:13 pm    Post subject: Re: Got milk? Reply with quote

drovkin wrote:
ok, another quick question (Sorry about all these)

If I got these:

http://www.buynshop.com/productinfophp3/VG-DDR-NXCB2

then what kind of mod should i look at to hopefully allow these to last a while? I don't mind paying $50 for two good pads, but I really didn't want to have to shell out $40 more on chair mats to make them decent, if i'm going to spend that much, I might as well just build my own metal one for $120 and have an amazing pad. Would these pads last a good long time if they weren't modded? Since they are of these type, do they actually even need to be modded? Thx.


if youre getting one of those nd modding them it will in my opinion be even better than a metal pad except for the Cobalt Fluxes> reall, you can't get a decent metal pad for $120
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cRazY FeeT
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141. PostPosted: Mon Feb 03, 2003 5:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
if youre getting one of those nd modding them it will in my opinion be even better than a metal pad except for the Cobalt Fluxes> reall, you can't get a decent metal pad for $120

I think he was talking about making his own....
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AzN_jErK
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142. PostPosted: Mon Feb 03, 2003 7:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

cRazY FeeT wrote:
Quote:
if youre getting one of those nd modding them it will in my opinion be even better than a metal pad except for the Cobalt Fluxes> reall, you can't get a decent metal pad for $120

I think he was talking about making his own....


I guess i should pay more attentiopn to what people write befor commenting . heehee
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HawkinsDDR
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143. PostPosted: Mon Feb 03, 2003 7:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Has anyone tried the Kommax heavy-duty pads you can get off of yahoo? E19.gif
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wumpus
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144. PostPosted: Mon Feb 03, 2003 7:35 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dizamn you guys ask a lot of questions!

1. You can get two good soft pads for less than the price of a single metal pad. Whichever you prefer is up to you, but in my opinion, DDR with a single pad is not really DDR.

2. Do the math people. Cobalt Flux = $300/ea, metal pads $120/ea, "deluxe" soft pads $25/ea. How many soft pads would I need to break before I was spending anywhere near what I would for a metal pad? And unless you get a Cobalt Flux, guess what, the inexpensive metal pads have to be modified, AND people have those fail on them too!

3. YES you MUST "mod" any soft pad to get good response from it on heavy/catastrophic songs, and to preserve its life. However, when modified, soft pads can be perfectly responsive, probably as good as any metal pad (except maybe a $300 Cobalt Flux I guess).

Now, how you modify your soft pad is up to you. The GOAL is to get something firm under the pad. If you have the "deluxe" zippered pads, I can recommend either the chair mat insert mod, or the BNS xtreme insert. Those will both run you about $15-$20 per pad, but the good news is-- the INSERT WILL LAST FOREVER. Even if the pad dies, you can take the insert and zip it inside a new $25 deluxe pad and you're back in business! That's why this is a ONE TIME COST.

Or you can go the slightly cheaper route and mount two $15 non-zippered "standard" pads to some plywood.. like so..

http://web.ics.purdue.edu/~jrruble/files/pics/ddrpads.jpg

I've already listed the reasons why I, personally prefer not to do this.. but in a nutshell, I think it's too ghetto (my opinion ONLY) and because it involves permanently mounting the pads, so they are hard to replace when/if they go bad.

Anyway that's enough questions. Either do, or do not. There is no try!
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LiLDDRKiD
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145. PostPosted: Mon Feb 03, 2003 8:08 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Umm.. I ordered the Cyphergames Ignitions and I really really need info on the best mod to use on them.. or a combination of 2 different mods...
I would like to know before I start to buy the supplies so I know what to buy... lol
THX for your help![/code]
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sofakng
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146. PostPosted: Mon Feb 03, 2003 8:45 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

☆Ke6dRt wrote:
I'd go with the DPR2, that is if you're commited to the plywood mod. Using a plywood mod on a DPR2 pad, or really any cheap pad, can put it at least up to par with an unmodded DX/Ignition style pad, if not better. DX/Ignition pads would need more than just a plywood mod to give them a significant performance boost.


Well... the levelsix.com pads say they have raised buttons (which would help I would think..?) and also I would think that the foam insert would be easier on your feet but I could be wrong. For the extra $20 (DPR2x2 = $42, DX padx2 = $62 [including shipping]) I'm thinking it would be worth it.

Only disadvantage is that if I buy from a local store I can return them if I have problems... but I do like the idea of having raised buttons and (supposedly) a better quality pad.
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TiVotj
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147. PostPosted: Tue Feb 04, 2003 2:26 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Since there isn't a convenient way to search this thread, and it's not an indexed FAQ or something, I guess I will just have to post my question like any "l@m3 n00b" would.

I have an Ignition-type pad (made by BNSUSA) that works great, but it has gotten me off on the timing. When I go to the arcade, I get proportion of 2 greats for every 1 perfect. Not good! I discovered the timing adjustment in the sound menu of the home version, and I am wondering what I should set it to. If I set it to either side, it seems to mess me up just as much either way.

Which timing adjustment is most accurate to the arcade (7th Mix) for an Ignition-style pad?
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sofakng
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148. PostPosted: Tue Feb 04, 2003 8:52 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quick question...

In Tommy-Gun's mod, he doesn't exactly say what he is using to cover his mats. Is he using a special pad cover (BNS?) or is it plastic of some sort?

I've decided I'm going all out, and doing the chair mat mod along with mounting it on top of plywood (mostly for the look), and then using black duct tape and carpet tape to make sure it stays in place.
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bio retard
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149. PostPosted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 3:54 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Set the timing to +2.
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GFBeach
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150. PostPosted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 1:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Well, I thought I was finished with the mods on my pads, but then I got bored and thought of new things to fix. laugh.gif

1) Each of my CG Ignitions are mounted on a separate piece of wood, when put together for doubles there's about 2 inches in between (not exact to the arcade measurement, but close enough). The thing is, since the Ignition pads sit about 1 - 1 1/2 inches off the ground, there's a little crevasse going down the middle. I'm not very good at doubles, but on more than one occasion I've gotten my foot wedged in there and twisted my ankle. Not very pleasent.

2) The two boards my pads are mounted on are literally latched together so they don't separate during doubles. Thing is, the whole assembly will still slide around a bit.

Here's what I did to fix them:

1) Went around to Home Depot and looked long and hard for SOMETHING that would fit the gap perfectly. I found two corrogated, long strips of lumber, cut them down to size, wrapped 'em up in duct tape (to prevent splinters), and they fit like a charm. E4.gif I wish I remembered exactly what they were called... they were pretty cheap.

2) I bought some of that cheap foam grippy stuff you put underneath carpets/whatever to keep them from sliding around on hardwood floors. Some of these kinds can get expensive, but I bought two rolls of the cheap kind--- $5 per roll, and each roll was long enough to cover the bottom of one pad (once cut into 12 inch wide strips). Also went and bought a medium sized can of contact cement and a cheap foam brush. Brushed glue on the underside of the wooden board, then layed the foam on top of it. Press down on the foam to make sure it bonds well, then let it sit. I'm supposed to let this dry for literally 72 hours, but I think it'll be fine after 24. I can go back and reapply glue later. happy.gif

A couple of warnings about #2: This glue is -powerful- stuff. If it bonds half as much as it SMELLS... seriously, work on this outside, like on a porch. If you do it indoors, the fumes WILL make you sick. I worked on the porch about two hours ago to do the gluing, took about half an hour, and I'm seriously feeling a little woozy. Also, leave the pads outside until the glue dries--- find some way of covering them up if you're worried about them being stolen (a tarp works great for this)--- you don't want these inside your house, the fumes will become a serious issue. Be very, very careful. However, I have heard from a friend who did this same kind of thing that once it's fully dried the glue holds the foam in place fantastically. So it's worth it. happy.gif

Once the glue dries, I'll give these pads a good test run and let you know how it goes.

EDIT: Of course, once the glue is dried, they're perfectly safe to bring indoors. laugh.gif But until then, be careful.
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TiVotj
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151. PostPosted: Wed Feb 05, 2003 2:03 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

bio retard wrote:
Set the timing to +2.


Thanks!
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GFBeach
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152. PostPosted: Thu Feb 06, 2003 5:51 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Well, I let the pads sit out on the porch for about five hours, then the fumes were bearable so I brought the pads inside. I should've still let the glue dry for a while, but I was too excited to wait any longer. I wish I'd done this sooner. These pads don't scoot around AT ALL. I mean, seriously. I did a six song run of (in no particular order) Ordinary World, I Was The One, Spin The Disk, Groove 2001, Paranoia MAX 190, and Rhythm and Police, all on heavy. Before the run, I set something in the dead-center of the pad assembly as a kind of measuring tool to gauge how much the pads moved off center. After the six song run, these things were still perfectly lined up.

Yay! biggrin.gif
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sofakng
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153. PostPosted: Thu Feb 06, 2003 7:49 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

RyukumuIsora wrote:
bought some of that cheap foam grippy stuff you put underneath carpets/whatever to keep them from sliding around on hardwood floors. Some of these kinds can get expensive, but I bought two rolls of the cheap kind--- $5 per roll, and each roll was long enough to cover the bottom of one pad (once cut into 12 inch wide strips). Also went and bought a medium sized can of contact cement and a cheap foam brush. Brushed glue on the underside of the wooden board, then layed the foam on top of it. Press down on the foam to make sure it bonds well, then let it sit. I'm supposed to let this dry for literally 72 hours, but I think it'll be fine after 24. I can go back and reapply glue later. happy.gif


I'm getting my levelsix.com pads tommorow and I plan on doing something similar to what you've done.

Could you be a little bit more specific on what you bought to keep the wooden boards from moving around on the floor? I was thinking about putting velcro strips on the underside of my board, not to velcro it to my carpet, but so that it would harder for the boards to just slide around... your idea is probably better E1.gif

Also, do you have anything on top of your pads (any covers or anything?), or do you have anything inside the pads (or is it just the regular foam insert?)

Oh, and do you have any pictures of your final result?

Thanks in advance.
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GFBeach
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154. PostPosted: Thu Feb 06, 2003 12:04 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

sofakng wrote:
I'm getting my levelsix.com pads tommorow and I plan on doing something similar to what you've done.

Could you be a little bit more specific on what you bought to keep the wooden boards from moving around on the floor? I was thinking about putting velcro strips on the underside of my board, not to velcro it to my carpet, but so that it would harder for the boards to just slide around... your idea is probably better E1.gif

Also, do you have anything on top of your pads (any covers or anything?), or do you have anything inside the pads (or is it just the regular foam insert?)

Oh, and do you have any pictures of your final result?

Thanks in advance.


I'll do what I can. riiight.gif I'm not sure how to describe the foam grippy stuff... it's a very thin rubbery foam, it's non adhesive, and one of it's uses is to keep rugs from scooting around on hardwood floors. The exact kind I bought is Manco brand "Easy Liner", and I bought two 12 inch x 14 feet rolls. Cheap ($5 per roll, and one roll has enough for one pad) and effective. Your velcro idea might work okay on carpet, but it probably won't have as solid a grip as the foam stuff, plus the velcro won't help if you ever have to set your pads up on a hard surface.

I don't use any pad covers on mine, but I have done some significant modifications to the foam insert. The only modification of that type that's really worth doing from my experiance is the chairmat mod wumpus thought of. Go to an Office Depot, Office Max, Staples, or something like that in your area and go into the furniture section. Somewhere, they'll sell thick vinyl or plastic chairmats--- the kind that you put on the carpet underneath where your office chair is so the wheels don't mush up the carpet. I bought one chairmat for each pad. They've got different kinds of chairmats, some thicker than others. I just bought the cheapest ones, like $16 each, and they work great. But, that is $16 per pad, and while I personally think $16 per pad is WELL worth the performance boost, this particular mod isn't cheap.

Naturally, the chairmats will be too big to fit inside the pads as-is. Go to Home Depot or Lowe's and buy a pair of snips--- they should be in the tools section, they're like industrial strength scissors (I also bought the foam grippy stuff at Lowes. They sell foam grippy stuff at Home Depot but it was a lot more expensive... higher grade, but the cheap stuff works great for me [so far]). You'll have to cut the chairmats to exactly the same size as the foam inserts. Set the cut chairmats on top of the inserts, and you'll have a pretty firm surface to jump around on with just enough cushioning to where you won't hurt your feet that badly. The snips will probably cost you somewhere in the ballpark of $10.

As soon as I can borrow a friend's digital camera, I'll take pics of my mod. I really oughtta go ahead and do that. riiight.gif
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sofakng
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155. PostPosted: Thu Feb 06, 2003 12:32 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

RyukumuIsora wrote:
...


Sorry for being a pain... one more question.

How did you mount your pads onto the wood boards? Tommy Gun used double-sided carpet tape, so I was thinking about using that to keep the pads onto the boards but I'm not sure how well it will work.

Also, did you do anything else to make it look nicer? Tommy Gun's mod looks excellent with the black duct tape, so I figured I'd do the same. However with the DX pads I'm afraid they will be too high (>1 inch) to actually tape the sides down. I'll probably just use the black duct tape for looks so nobody can see the ugly wood beneath the boards.

Thanks for all your help!
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GFBeach
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156. PostPosted: Thu Feb 06, 2003 4:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

No no no, you aren't being a pain. I don't mind helping happy.gif To mount my pads to the wooden boards, I bought and used some industrial strength velcro (that's what it's called). You MIGHT have trouble getting the adhesive side of the velcro to bond with the underside of the DDR pad; I did, but I borrowed my roommate's hot glue gun and literally hotglued the velcro to the pad. Works great. biggrin.gif Though even the hot glue is losing it's bonding some... I'll probably have to reglue it in a few months. disgust.gif When i say "losing it's bonding" I don't mean it's ripping holes in the pad--- the glue in some parts has literally just popped off. Not a problem, though.

And yeah, black duct tape is the shiz. Looks a whole lot better than gray duct tape. laugh.gif I was able to do a pretty nice duct taping job for two pads with two rolls of 20 yard black duct tape, 'pretty nice' meaning I probably taped up more than I needed to. riiight.gif But it looks nice!
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cRazY FeeT
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157. PostPosted: Thu Feb 06, 2003 5:40 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

my review on the BNS-DX ULTRA pads:

they are excellent! they are much better than the mymybox 2.5 dx's, that i used to have. E4.gif the insert is very hard and toughm and definatly does not have a light, cheap feeling that other dx's may have(just as wumpus desctibed it) E13.gif. the only downside i can think of is that it is a bit heavy......but that can be more of an advantage than a disadvantage since the pad wont move so much.
I highly recommend this pad to anyone who cant afford a CF or cant build their own, plus u get a free adapter that works great too biggrin.gif
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Ke6dRRtY
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158. PostPosted: Thu Feb 06, 2003 6:51 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

cRazY FeeT wrote:
my review on the BNS-DX ULTRA pads:

they are excellent! they are much better than the mymybox 2.5 dx's, that i used to have. E4.gif the insert is very hard and toughm and definatly does not have a light, cheap feeling that other dx's may have(just as wumpus desctibed it) E13.gif. the only downside i can think of is that it is a bit heavy......but that can be more of an advantage than a disadvantage since the pad wont move so much.
I highly recommend this pad to anyone who cant afford a CF or cant build their own, plus u get a free adapter that works great too biggrin.gif

Is the difference in the insert, the pad itself, or both? I thought the BNS, MMB, and RO pads were identical with respect to both the pad and the insert, that theory might've just proven to be false... anyway thanks for the quick review. E4.gif E7.gif
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wumpus
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159. PostPosted: Thu Feb 06, 2003 10:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Is the difference in the insert, the pad itself, or both? I thought the BNS, MMB, and RO pads were identical with respect to both the pad and the insert, that theory might've just proven to be false... anyway thanks for the quick review.

No, I think his review was totally consistent with that theory.. everything he lists (weight, stiffness, responsiveness) is a result of the superior insert.

What's weird about this is that it's still cheaper to get two "deluxe" pads with crappy inserts for $44.95 from cyphergames, then buy two quality bns xtreme inserts for $14.95 each.. than it is to buy the red octane or bns xtreme pads-- which theoretically have the heavy insert included!

$44.95 two cyphergames deluxe ignition pads
$14.95 BNS xtreme insert
$14.95 BNS xtreme insert

= $74.85 + shipping, or 37.50 per pad. So it's cheaper to buy it all seperately, I doubt the shipping costs for buying it all from BNS at once would cover the difference..

And if you can't/won't get the bns extreme insert, you can do the chair mat mod on your crappy foam insert for 95% of the same responsiveness.
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