First of all thank you very much for your input! After reading all answers and reflecting my experiences with making my own milkdud, with duds from others, with Elkmaster and Triangel "undudded", pressing dry or not, compressing the tips during installation by beating them with a file, I have an actual - maybe an intermediate - resume:
Elkmaster "like it is"
- The softest tip that I know so far
- Hardness and elasticity vary in a pretty wide range, and also how much and quickly they break in during playing.
For this reason it is recommended to outsort the "bad guys" and not use them anymore.
- If installed like it is, a good Elkmaster plays very soft and takes many hours (10+) to fully break in.
- Compared to Triangel it takes less force and less time to break in.
Elkmaster dry pressed before installing
- If dry pressed the breaking in during playing is much less and it takes less playing time to reach the final condition.
- The force during pressing affects the later hardness and elasticity, but not as much as it affects a soaked tip.
Elkmaster soaked in milk and pressed afterwards
- Soaking them in milk (3 days in the fridge is my personal favour) and pressing back to the original thickness will result
in a much harder and less elastic tip than without soaking in milk and installing it "like it is".
- The time of soaking affects also the later hardness and elasticity (the longer soaking the harder and less elascitcit will be).
- The force during pressing a milk soaked Elk will strongly affect the later elasticity and hardness.
- Pressing 3 days under constant force will allow to have very good constance from tip to tip.
- By soaking in milk for at least 2 days + pressing as hard as possible you can create also very good breaking tips
(which are still too elastic for jumping).
With Triangel - in comparison to Elkmaster - above mentioned factors are principally the same, but the levle of hardness is at Triangel in general a bit higher, and the elasticity is less.
If it goes about the hit / feeling / sound, so far I like both - Elkmaster and Triangel - very much if during installation heavily beaten with a file, and it is depending on the shaft and butt which of both feels better to me. What I will try in near future are different levels of dry pressing before installation and no file beating, hoping that I'll have at the end same feeling / performance like an Elk or Triangel beaten with a file during installation. Looking for a defined method of dry pressing Elkmaster or Triangel (with a defined force and time) is at the moment my target.
Soaking them in milk + pressing is to me not the first choice in order to have a soft tip. Soaking is a good alternative in order to create tips starting from mediumsoft upwards.
I'm very happy that I've now understood that all these layered tips will not interest me in future any more..
