🖥️ Elevate Your Workspace with Style and Comfort!
The Reflex Lab Mouse Pad is a professional-grade accessory designed for gamers and professionals alike. Measuring 9"x8" with a plush 3mm thickness, it offers a silky smooth surface for optimal mouse performance. Its waterproof top and anti-slip rubber backing ensure durability and stability, while the machine-washable feature makes it easy to maintain. With high-quality edge stitching, this mouse pad is built to withstand the rigors of daily use.
Manufacturer | Reflex Lab |
Brand | Reflex Lab |
Item Weight | 1.58 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 9 x 8 x 0.12 inches |
Item model number | 6865835 |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Color | Black |
Shape | Square |
Material Type | plush, Rubber |
Size | Pro 9 |
Manufacturer Part Number | 9Black |
M**R
Best mousepad I've found so far, it's lasted me 5 years of daily use.
This mousepad was exactly what I was looking for when I bought it back in mid-2018. Thick enough to be comfortable on a hard surface, while also not being so thick that it strains your wrist. I do prefer my mousepads to be roughly twice as thick as this one, but as detailed below that's one of the reasons I chose this thin mousepad due to some other circumstances of my particular computer use area.Aside from my unusual setup which required me to make some small modifications to the mousepad, this mousepad has been performing flawlessly for a little less than 5 1/2 years now, but I am now in need of a new one, and I'll be buying the same exact one I bought in 2018, the "standard 8"x9" mousepad".The modifications I made include fabricating a stiff backing out of 1/4" plywood, and then affixing the mousepad to the backing at the corners by using some screws I had lying around from when I was much younger and disassembled appliances to figure out how they work (I'm sure you could find screws that would work at a hardware store, probably some sort of screw designed for attaching handles to cabinet doors and things like that).The reason I needed this stiff backing is because I use my computer while laying on my bed bed most of the time, and my mouse ends up beside me on the bed instead of on a desk. My bed is pushed right up against my desk, the monitor is mounted up high to the wall behind the desk, and I lay on my bed cross-wise with a pile of pillows to prop me up so I can see my monitor, you might think it's weird, but it's extremely comfortable for very long sessions of using the computer, every day, and I don't even have any back or neck problems which surprised my mother.That brings me to the one tiny little problem I have with this mousepad. It's the rubber backing.If you are going to use this mousepad in the repair bay of an auto shop, it might not last as long as mine has, and that's because the rubber backing material they use is not oil resistant.I discovered this because I accidentally dripped some sub sauce on this mousepad, and I thought I cleaned it up rather well, but I didn't put it in the washing machine because I didn't want the stitching on the edges to unravel.Sub sauce is basically Italian "oil and vinegar" dressing, but used on a sub sandwich, and I thought I had cleaned it off well enough that I didn't have to put it in the washing machine, but I guess it turns out that's where the problems began.I will say that it did take a rather long time for the rubber backing to degrade to the point that I'm starting to have issues with the mousepad not providing good tracking in certain spots for my mouse anymore, but the point remains that you should keep oil as far away from this mousepad as possible, and if you DO get oil on it, you should machine wash it promptly to prevent the rubber backing from degrading. As for washing instructions, I don't know if it came with those or not, but I'm going to guess that you should probably only use cold water and no bleach, unsure about using podded detergents, and as for the cycle my gut feeling says you probably want to go as gentle as possible on a mousepad and do NOT put it in the dryer at all, instead hang it up outside if the weather is suitable (or hang it up inside in the shower or tub so it can drip-dry and air dry if the weather's bad or it's winter like it is for me right now).To be perfectly honest, I blame myself for being lazy when taking care of this mousepad, rather than blaming the product for not being oil resistant. If I had to guess, oil-resistant foam rubber that would provide otherwise similar material properties to the material currently used on the backing of this mousepad is probably more expensive than whatever kind of rubber it is already using, and that's reason enough to not use it, because really most people wouldn't expect oil to be near a mousepad in the first place. Additionally, an oil-resistant mousepad would probably be an extremely niche product at best, and therefore not worth producing.Like I said, I hold myself at fault for the failure of this mousepad. I'll be taking better care of the 2nd one.
\**Y
Great Desktop Surface for your rat to run around on!
I bought the XXXL version of the Mouse Pad/Mat (which I just call a "Desktop Surface" since it takes up the full 36" length & all but 4" of the width on the long side of the L-Shaped Desk it's on). It has so far exceeded my expectations & I like it better than the Xtrac Pads Ripper XXL surface that this has replaced. When I opened the plastic wrap, there was no chemical smell, which was nice. Also, it didn't take long, maybe two hours, to flatten out & all I did was lay my phone on one corner & the accessories box for my Roccat Nyth on the other corner with a desk lamp in the middle. Nothing was needed for the other end. I attribute this to the fact that the mat was not rolled tightly in the plastic wrapping, but instead was rolled gently, like a yoga mat, instead of how most mouse pads are rolled: very tightly with a final diameter of 2" or less. The final diameter was 4" or 4.5" I can't remember which.In the interest of fairness & full disclosure, the Ripper XXL was the older version without the stitched edges, so it's not a direct product comparison, however that was my second Ripper XXL, the first one having lasted about 5 years & surviving a move, two desk changes & being subjected to a few stretching feline claw punctures. Which means it's safe to say that I intended to purchase the updated Ripper XXL with the edge stitching but was turned off by the $32 price tag as well as the understanding that the surface, which strikes a compromise between smooth/fast & precision movements makes it what one might call a "medium texturing" requires some maintenance for the best performance. I would usually end up using a lint roller at least once a week to go over it & every 2-3 weeks I would have to take a slightly damp microfiber cloth to it.If this doesn't seem like much, consider this: I use a wrist rest with my rat & don't rest my arm directly on the surface. Instead, I have a black cloth napkin folded into a square which I place my forearm on. it's basically to protect the surface from the detrimental effects of human skin & oils, extending the life of the pad & likewise prevent extended contact/friction with the surface from irritating my skin, particularly at the raw edges. The napkin gets laundered regularly.The Reflex Lab XXXL Desktop Surface, by contrast, has wonderfully stitched edges in my favorite color, Blue, and the surface is quite supple. The term used in the marketing of this product is "silky smooth" & I find that to be an appropriate, accurate description. On several occasions I found that my protective napkin had shifted away from my arm, leaving my skin to contact the surface of the pad. Zero irritation to my skin. Likewise, my rat enjoys smoother gliding/skating & the very small brand logo is unobtrusive & looks, for a lack of a better description, to be "baked in" between layers. To put it another way: it's not a silk-screened logo that will eventually start to flake off to the point where your mild OCD compels you to remove it completely & have to take a hand-held vacuum to the surface yet still be haunted by the remaining ghostly outline. Until you rotate it so you don't see it. ;-OAll in all, I think this Desktop Surface will hold up for at least as long as the Ripper XXL did, if not longer. To maximize the usable life, have some suggestions.When stuff eventually does get on the surface, I wipe it off with a cloth instead of a hand (I usually do that with the napkin, which I still use save for the times when it occasionally drifts). Less to catch on the fabric & much gentler.To that point, I wipe it off regularly with a soft cloth, but I'm yet to have to use a damp cloth & I've had it about a month.I don't eat on it.I try not to set anything abrasive or rough directly on it.If I must lay one of my knives on my desk, it goes on the napkin every time. If it's my Benchmade, I make sure to close it 100% of the time, cause I know it'll go right through down to the glass if it slides off the napkin. There's a scar on the Xtrac Pad to attest to that fact, the "skin" of which is being of a tougher texture than the Reflex Lab's.
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