I thought I read you previously had a Trigger IO. So you should be familiar with the general settings and documentation for that product.
What is lacking (even for the Trigger IO) is a somewhat step-by-step directions on the most effective way to properly setup your triggers in the module. Unfortunately I can't provide that for you at this time though I hope to potentially bend the directions I crafted for the Trigger IO forum into something appropriate for the MegaDrum. Assuming I even know what I'm doing at all.
Note, in your post you didn't mention what "problems" you were having, what you've tried to correct it, what happened when you tried that etc. Since your post only referenced HOT pads everyone is going to assume you have some sort of velocity issue where you're reaching max MIDI (127) velocity too easily. Your best bet is to address it on the trigger via trimpot or resistor as others have suggested (and as Dmitri suggested elsewhere).
Here's some helpful text I've scraped from the documentation as well as the forums on "hot" pads. I have them as well.
When pads are too hot for MegaDrum, you'll be loosing dynamic range even if you set HighLevel to 1023 (maximum). To test if a pad is too hot, set Gain to 0 (but since you already set "All Gains Low" to Yes, individual gain levels have no effect anyway) , HiLvlAuto to Yes, HighLevel to around 100 and hit the pad hard a few dozen times. After that see what HighLevel MegaDrum registered for the pad. If it's above 850 it is too hot for MegaDrum and your setup will underperform.
The bigger difference between Threshold and HighLevel the better. 550 is alright.
Connect a 4k7 resistor in parallel with clips [alligator clips to connect multimeter to trigger output] to simulate MegaDrum input impedance. Then ideally the strongest hits should not produce voltage peaks above ~4.5v.
If you really don't want to do any of that then you can use level compression in the module. If I understand what is documented, it works exactly as the name says, it compresses the levels (velocity) to make it harder to hit peak velocity (127). I'm assuming that's dealing with the raw input levels prior to triggering MIDI. Where I believe the Curve deals with adjusting the actual MIDI data after it's been converted from the raw piezo signal. Just making wild guesses there. But both shuld help you carve out a better performance velocity wise.