• expired

Lian Li Silver Aluminium Gaming Mouse Pad [PT-M3A] $30 Shipped

00

Lian Li needs no introduction. Almost all of their computer case is aimed at the very premium end of the market. Along with computer cases their accessories are equally built with the no compromise on quality attitude.

The [PT-M3A] mouse pad may be an odd product on its own. With the aluminum surface it is a very unique item and with its own benefits. Apart from high speed and precision, it is one of those mouse pad that can be cleaned nicely as opposed to conventional mouse pads that gets dirty with use till thrown away.

For 30 days, its on special @ $20 with flat rate postage $9.80

All the best.

Mod: Added price to title

Related Stores

eBay Australia
eBay Australia
Marketplace
SalesBerg
SalesBerg

closed Comments

  • +2

    Price in title please.

  • +1

    It costs $9.80 to send a mousepad via post?

    • Everything we sell has to be registered post, and the rate is standard across the board with many other products in our store.
      If you consider the website that comes closest with our price is charging $14 for shipping of the same product.
      If anyone would consider pickup, that makes postage costs $0.
      Kind Regards.

    • It's not a normal mousepad it's made of aluminium which are heavier than a normal mousepad. Plus the cost to send some thing that's say 500g with registered post can be $10.

      • +2

        A half kilo aluminium mouse mat?

        • a half kilo alumunium mouse??

        • All parcels weighing under 500g cost $6.60 to post. Registered is an additional $3.20.

          However if this weighs under 250g and the packaging is less than 2cm thick it can be posted at large letter rate $1.80.

      • He's right imo, my aluminium mouse pad is (340g).
        This one is 4mm and mines only about 2.5mm.

  • Many years ago I had a small lian li aluminium mousepad and while it was lovely to look at, provided an odd feeling under mouse and seemed to wear away at the feet a little more than I'd like. Though I'm sure they have probably improved by now

  • Aluminium mouse pads. First I've heard of them.
    Lian Li must use off-cuts from their side panels (from cases) for these !!!

    • Pfft. Hard mouse pads are great… any pad with a hard surface so you can use your laptop with a real mouse on a couch.

      Aluminium is one option. Be prepared for it to be cold in winter. I used to have an alum razer one.
      I've got a glass one now, it's better than alum (brand is steelseries) but not sure if every mouse will like it.
      Hard plastic would be the most practical.

      • As you mentioned, there are variations out there. We have had Teflon coated ones earlier, Razer has brought out a full range of different ones, from lower end to as premium as it gets side of things. As mouse has evolved so did the pads. I personally went through quite a few types myself.
        But to say the least I'll never be using those bacteria infested sponge mouse pads for sure. They start off good (smells nice too, lol) then from that day onward its down hill. Discoloration and dirt etc till its replacement time.

        Low resistance does it for me..

      • Hard plastic is a good idea, and there is already a cheap hard plastic "mouse pad" you can easily buy.

        Use a cutting board of the type you find in the kitchen for cutting veges and meat. It is easily washable (you can even put it in your dishwasher!), it has a textured surface for good mouse tracking, and it has a low-friction surface.

        Don't get one that is a dark colour, many mice don't get enough light back from a dark-coloured surface. Get an uncoloured (white) one.

        Thickness can be an issue, but if you get a full-size one (A4 size or larger), both your wrist and the mouse will be resting on it.

        Best of all, you probably already have one, so you can try it out risk-free!

    • It's not only Lian Li that makes them. I've had a Razer eXactMat aluminium gaming mousepad for years.

      • I've been thinking of getting one from http://www.gearedgs.com/

        The noise that aluminium mice pads generate and the fact they can sometimes wear out the feet of the mouse quickly has deterred me a bit but.

  • looked it up on staticice…cheapest by $1 i think…so definitely the lowest price atm….but is it a bargain?

    for me it isnt, but hey, for someone else maybe it could be I guess.

    • I saw that one too.. though if we are referring to the same one, I believe they have freight of $14. (Considering again that we are talking about the same merchant)

      • true…however my point isnt so much that your deal isnt cheap, it's just that it may not be enough to sway someone as a 'bargain'…I'm just not sure that many people are holding out on this item to save $1-$4.

        best of luck tho.

    • i hope that is a typo from $21….otherwise send me the link for $1 =)

      also they do pick up so delivery is free if in Sydney

      PS where is pick up from?

  • I wonder how it is with static?

    • +2

      Static electricity or Static Ice

      • electricity

        • Good question.
          Static electricity may be generated. There is rubber padding and the top surface is conductive. Though my opinion is that it will be very less as far as any effect go. Generally mousepads have plastic or rubber surface while we are rubbing another plastic mouse on it. That should also generate static electricity. While the metal surface should spread the charge around, though the total charge should still be the same just distributed. Non the less, one touch should discharge the lot..

          Interesting physics question..

  • This reminds me of this "mouse pad" that someone bought. Not sure if they still sell it but it was essentially a smallish teflon coated baking tray without the lip. They said it worked just as well as these expensive mouse pads but it was <10$.

    • Yes i remember that aswell interesting read, required a bit of machining i beleive or maybe that was the post about the teflon pans

Login or Join to leave a comment