Nice! That looks great. May I ask what dye you used?Trev wrote:Sunday night dye job. Modifiers are now Black:
I have previously tried dyeing Cherry PBT keys with liquid "RIT"-brand dye, but the keys got only brown.
Nice! That looks great. May I ask what dye you used?Trev wrote:Sunday night dye job. Modifiers are now Black:
Thank you for the heads up, Limmy.Limmy wrote:Congrats on finding your keyboard.
I would keep your HHKB away from the non-slip pad. Here is what happened to my black HHKB after some time on the pad.
source: http://www.kbdmania.net/xe/3590725
I think the pad reacted with black paint on my HHKB, so I don't know if it would damage your white HHKB. However, it is better safe than sorry right?
I have found 3M self stick rubber pads work quite well and have excellent grip. I got them at Michaels (arts & crafts store) for under $5.00 USD.Limmy wrote:Congrats on finding your keyboard.
I would keep your HHKB away from the non-slip pad. Here is what happened to my black HHKB after some time on the pad.
source: http://www.kbdmania.net/xe/3590725
I think the pad reacted with black paint on my HHKB, so I don't know if it would damage your white HHKB. However, it is better safe than sorry right?
The Realforce models have great rubber feet on the front. You'd think PFU would be able to do something similar for $400mj45 wrote:I have found 3M self stick rubber pads work quite well and have excellent grip. I got them at Michaels (arts & crafts store) for under $5.00 USD.Limmy wrote:Congrats on finding your keyboard.
I would keep your HHKB away from the non-slip pad. Here is what happened to my black HHKB after some time on the pad.
source: http://www.kbdmania.net/xe/3590725
I think the pad reacted with black paint on my HHKB, so I don't know if it would damage your white HHKB. However, it is better safe than sorry right?
Thanks for sharing the tip. I too prefer 3M adhesives to any other brand.mj45 wrote: I have found 3M self stick rubber pads work quite well and have excellent grip. I got them at Michaels (arts & crafts store) for under $5.00 USD.
I had exactly the same issue with a vintage beige Cherry computer, and there was no way whatsoever (isopropyl alcohol of course, but also several kinds of cleaning products) to remove that pattern from the shell. It's still thereTrev wrote:Thank you for the heads up, Limmy.Limmy wrote:Congrats on finding your keyboard.
I would keep your HHKB away from the non-slip pad. Here is what happened to my black HHKB after some time on the pad.
source: http://www.kbdmania.net/xe/3590725
I think the pad reacted with black paint on my HHKB, so I don't know if it would damage your white HHKB. However, it is better safe than sorry right?
I'll keep checking mine every few days. So far there's no evidence of anything changing with the white case. Hopefully it's ok.
I've ordered varying shapes of rubber pads off Ebay to see what works best.kbdfr wrote:I had exactly the same issue with a vintage beige Cherry computer, and there was no way whatsoever (isopropyl alcohol of course, but also several kinds of cleaning products) to remove that pattern from the shell. It's still thereTrev wrote:Thank you for the heads up, Limmy.Limmy wrote:Congrats on finding your keyboard.
I would keep your HHKB away from the non-slip pad. Here is what happened to my black HHKB after some time on the pad.
source: http://www.kbdmania.net/xe/3590725
I think the pad reacted with black paint on my HHKB, so I don't know if it would damage your white HHKB. However, it is better safe than sorry right?
I'll keep checking mine every few days. So far there's no evidence of anything changing with the white case. Hopefully it's ok.
As it appears only gradually, chances are that you won't even notice it until it is too late. Unless perhaps if every now and then you check your board against another one, thus lowering your perception threshold.
Yep. I was aiming to black them out completely with no legends. I'm also interested in swapping my white case for black, if I can find someone who's interested.cookie wrote: ...
Edit: Cool Dye Job but I'd dye those modifyer caps dark grey or something like this, the contrast is way to harsh and the lettering is gone. But really nice Keyboard
There should be a DIP switch with which you can swap the Alt and Meta keys. Then the Alt Gr symbol will be on the same key position as on a Windows keyboard. However, the < > key is missing on the HHKB because it has a large left Shift.ne0phyte wrote:If you never used ANSI before the switch will be a lot harder - especially since we need all the (){}[];,."'/\| and so on and all of them are on different keys compared to the German ISO layout.
the keyboard itself costs approx $165. I don't know yet how much I'm going to pay in proxies. But at the end it won't be cheap. I guess around $200/220.Jim66 wrote:Interesting, how much did you end up paying? Was it significantly less than a HHKB?matt3o wrote:I've got that one Trev. I'll have it in a month or so.
Time to update my "search is over, found the perfect keyboard" thread.Trev wrote:If I purchase any additional keyboards, they would only be for projects or experiments. I don't feel I can do any better than the HHKB for getting actual work done.