Finally, a potentially practical answer
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If my idea of the hole plus optional rubber or silicone plug works to dampen the rebound of the flipper, it seems a similar hole and plug could be made in the side of the barrel. I hope lot_lizard is watching this thread--there are a lot of experimentation opportunities here for prototyping.t!ng wrote:What if one silenced the sound of the spring hitting the barrel? Couldn't you just tape a little rubber band on the inside?
Not the exact same spot, but definitely the same general area. I'm pretty sure that's why the part of the stem inside the barrel is sculpted the way it is: for guiding the spring's direction. I still want to see the mechanism working inside a transparent barrel, though.
I remember somebody trying a little piece of rubber band in place of the floss, but my experience is that rubber bands deteriorate into something nasty after a couple of years.
Where did you put it? Inside the spring (the old, known solution) or inside the plastic barrel, on the side the spring buckles? (in the latter case, the permanent solution is trickier in that you would need to fix the material, rubber or floss, so that it stays there) Maybe some very thin rubber cylinder with the same diameter as the barrel ...
Standard dental floss mod - inside the spring. Not sure - may be the spring doesn't even hit the barrel normally, it's just part of the stored energy is spent on bending the floss and the flipper twacks the PCB with less force hence quieter.Laser wrote:
Where did you put it? Inside the spring (the old, known solution) or inside the plastic barrel, on the side the spring buckles? (in the latter case, the permanent solution is trickier in that you would need to fix the material, rubber or floss, so that it stays there) Maybe some very thin rubber cylinder with the same diameter as the barrel ...
Gentlemen,
My observations match.
This this with a thin rubber band, cut down to the size of the spring, and inserted inside, in the same way as the floss mod? I've seen it done with string, but never with anything as rigid as a rubber band. What diameter/size of rubber band?
I'm surprised that the tactility is affected by the flipper's travel. I had thought the tactility came from the spring collapsing, not from anything to do with the hammer. What does it feel like now? More linear, or just less jarring? Does the weighting change?
It becomes ~2 dimes lighter, and the the dip becomes less pronounced. Looks like the spring is more bent at rest (because flipper is halfway pressed) and collapses earlier. Activation point moves ~1mm higher, keeps pretty consistent. "More linear" describes it pretty fairly.
Well, the thing is that this rubber was the same I used to make my own Topre silencing rings, i.e. this is from a very thin (around or under 1mm), very "non-rigid" rubber sheet - I simply cut a 2mm-wide strip with the approx. length of the spring and yes, I used it exactly as the floss mod.drevyek wrote:This this with a thin rubber band, cut down to the size of the spring, and inserted inside, in the same way as the floss mod? I've seen it done with string, but never with anything as rigid as a rubber band. What diameter/size of rubber band?