I baught a "Trust" tablet last year and finaly pulled it out of the box an hooked it up. Problem is, it draws really jaggard lines and frequently draws a streight line when I try and draw a curve. Is this something I'm doing wrong or is it just a piece of shit?
Anyone know anything about this brand? It was all I could find localy and had some decent reviews.
It's a Trust TB-3100
I have never used a tablet before so I have no idea whats up.
Replies
Get a Wacom Bamboo if you are short in money. They are cheap and quite a leap from any Trust tablet. Oh and the pen is battery free which makes it a lot lighter
Figured there was something wrong with it. I think I will just hold out for now and save towards a Clintique. I got this thing cuz it was cheap and all I could find....
Whats the point of a tablet that won't draw properly............ Dumb fuckers. i guess I'll just toss it or pull it appart to see how it ticks.
Wacom the only true device you can get. If you dont have the money look out on eBay or somewhere else for a use one - they are as good as new usually. The same can be said the other way around: if you buy a regular wacom tablet (not the expensive LCD panel ones) it propably will last a real life.
Driver support is topNotch as well: we have some very old wacom tablets here at the uni (pre 1996) and there are still drivers available for common OS systems (mac windows)
I can now draw circles, lines and everything without having to move the pen at light speed. I wonder why Trust didn't add the card into the design it really makes all the difference.
Figured I would post this incase anyone else is in the same boat as me. This applys to the PENTAGRAM Open too seeing as they are basicly the same tablet. Hope this is usefull.
Still going to get something better though. I suppose its good enough to learn on for now.
I told the bosses and they sent them back. They were replaced with Pensketch 12"x9"which are about the same price and work pretty good apart from the occasional big of delay. But the drawing is quite smooth and steady.
Nothing compared to my cheap Wacom Graphire though. Advice = spend the extra it well worth it.
Even if your forced to replace the cable by hand with a spare camera usb cord, a pocket knife and a battery powered soldering iron.