>Spring Bak insoles are more dense than hard upholstery foam or gel insoles, so no slack is brought in by using the insole material. While I am only using insole material to pad problem areas, it might be good to use it on top of teeth in the first place, on “molar” type of flat-topped teeth like someone(realmcdeal?) here is experimenting with different tire track type of patterns with.
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Molar top teeth is a flattering description of those on my beta Bib; now ground down beyond zero (indents ground out as well), there’s actually nothing left of the original top teeth.
On my Starter, about half the length the top teeth are still there, so those are almost but not quite down to molar length.
I’m not adding anything at the top space area. The first mod I did on the Starter was to cut and rip out the top teeth padding. You said yours is unmodded, but fear not doing so, since this padding serves no practical purpose; and you’ll obviously have to rid it anyway if you were to grind the teeth down.
>I have an unmodified padded Starter,
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Top teeth padding comes right off.
>Right now I’m doing that “bib says this will work” fulcrum with a rice bag,
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Also might want to try a fulcrum placed over the top of the shaft, hanging at angles somewhere between SO and SU. A mini-block under the desk and fulcrum rod under the thighs, shaft under that; you get the idea.
>I’m reluctant to file top teeth until I’ve tried everything, but they’ve always pinched unless I use this pad, or a tight enough wrap and pushed down on the wrap on top while tightening.
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Pushing the top downwards into the well when tightening the top is standard procedure for me. It works every time done SD with a low weight; just a kg or so.
>If I didn’t have wrap and the original padding on teeth, I can’t imagine the side teeth would not bite.
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I hang unwrapped, no pinch. See above, and below.
>It’s funny, 30 minutes and I don’t want to take it off.
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I kind of like that too. Newbie hangers should take care not to go past 20 min or so because in the beginning they’ll be stretching the blood vessels real thin. Later, 30 min is not the limit with an optimally modded Starter, and HTW or unwrapped. I never got up to 30 min with Theraband.
Like gerry posted above, a Bib is meant to be personally adjusted but also with success tool customized. Bleh (pun)
>How wide do those patch channels have to be to promote circulation but not be painful? Metric if you like.
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First, you need the mousepad material to be thick enough that your shaft belly won’t be mashed on the plastic which the mousepad is taped to. I had the best results with a 6mm thick foamy mousepad (I wrote spongy in a previous post, but that was an error I realized after edit time was out).
With this material and thickness, I found the optimal channel width around 4mm. The pattern as in #3, last patch pic; or a variation of that one, with the end channels slightly less diagonal, not merging with the other channels all the way out on the side. Three channels merging looks good in theory, but it can be tricky to make the merging point as slim as the width of the channels.
Foamy material definitely helps because it’s much easier to cut than spongy material. It also has better adhesive properties.
Those with slim shaft, the top area modded and a patch fix should be worthwhile to explore.
Those with girthier shaft should find an ever better result with the top area modded and no patch.
HTWs all the way, or unwrapped. Meaning if I had a slim shaft I’d throw in a patch instead of over-wrapping with Thera or similar.
>Some biting on top tendon this time(so pulley). Maybe I should file, but that means stripping the padding off the teeth. Realmcdeal makes filing sound promising though.
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Check back on the SD top tightening I mentioned. And sooner or later that padding is coming off.
>”The triangular channel is where the dorsal veins should have unrestricted passage”
It’s too small, so the opposite is happening. Sharp teeth is what I feel. I could file out that top triangular channel and round the top corner of the side teeth.
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First grind the length of the teeth, then hang and adjust your basal settings with the top teeth fully engaged. With these settings, use a mildly rounded needle-file and grind out on the engaged teeth so you get a high and smooth arch.
Careful with the rounding; the skin will find its way into the the crease. Gently smooth the sharpness away after grinding, no more than that.
>I can see a tendon on top that’s too big to fit into that channel, and veins are perhaps beside that tendon but I can’t see them.
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Is that not the wide contours of a dorsal vein you’re seeing?