For gasket mounting, it was going to be O-rings under the plate. that makes it so you can change between the two without a different plate needed. I have never used a gasket board so I wanted to be able to try without jumping in fully. I will see if i can come up with a PCB mount system as well. That will be a fun project as well without having to do a full PCB tear up.
Why would you need to change to different o-rings?
Gasket mount should not feel much if ANY different than top or bottom mount regardless of the o-rings used. They are not there for suspension, only sound/vibration isolation.
I was going for an 0.1" gap between the pcb and the top plate. you can see it in the image below. that way variances would be hidden well and with that large, it wont look like I am trying to hide the gap and failing. I can see how people dont like that design. I will take your advice and hide the sides of the PCB by making the bevels of the opening larger. This will also help with the stiffness to stop warping.
What I said above goes double here.
Either clamp it or give it a wide berth, not both. If you expect movement (as it sounds above), 0.1mm is not enough.
You can't have it both ways, you have to commit to a lot of movement and give it room to move or clamp it down (which won't work the way you want, it's not a trampoline). There is no dipping your toe in on this, either do or do not, you either commit to one or the other. If you want it to work both ways you have to design it to work both ways or it will not work in either. Ultimately though, understand, gasket mount is not a dampening system for bottoming out.
As for liking it, I like it, but I can see some people being a bit weirded out by it. If it's only for you, you're the only one that matters.
The fact the holes are very different sizes I think is better than both of them being almost even but a bit off. The left and right are different in terms of busyness was an issue i had so i made the SMD parts larger to help with that. i cant think of anything else to put there lol. maybe change from SMD parts to THT to make similar to the diodes. that might help with spacing out more.
One idea I had was 2 or 3 rows of resistors per side, then scatter the other parts, or run the controller down the right side to offset the resistors, maybe a third window. Another option is further offset the size to give the resistors more room.
Yeah, i designed this in Inventor then exported to blender. I didnt think of making the switches but I have added the screws to make sure they are mountable. making the feet is a good shout tho. i will do that and see how it looks.
This goes back to what works in one but not another...
You drew it up without concern for those parts, while you think it's not an issue here, what if you sent this to manufacturing and had no room for the pins?
DRAW EVERYTHING, because even missing one single hole could cost you hundreds of dollars in do-overs.
Ever work on a car and wonder why it was made like that, nearly impossible to work on? It's because someone had their head so far up in a they couldn't tell how close it was to something else not being shown while they worked (REALLY, REALLY easy to do) . It's very easy to put a screw in a place you can't actually reach. Or end up with two heads facing each other, making one or the other impossible to use.
It sounds like I'm over emphasizing this but if you haven't designed in cad and sent something out to be made or 3d printed, you really can't grasp how different evaluating something on a screen is compared to holding it in your hand and evaluating it. Ask people doing 3d printing how many revisions they end up making even on simple parts, you would probably be shocked at how many, very simple mistakes happen and are not caught until it's finished. Draw the o-rings, draw the screws, draw the switch pins otherwise you may forget about them and once you send off the plans each mistake costs you money.
You might not like it, but you will feel real stupid if you get the whole thing back from anodizing and realize some tiny part means a complete do-over. Shops generally don't give a discount unless they are all done at the same time.