![Very Happy :D](./images/smilies/icon_e_biggrin.gif)
Toshiba-branded Alps Bigfoot keyboard with red + clicky Alps switches
- doomsday_device
- Location: Germany
you joined today only to post in this thread about this switches and dont want to give any more details?fool wrote: 03 Jan 2023, 17:39 The day I have the needed enthusiasm to clean it up I think I can take some picures. This thread is already years old so don't hold your breath![]()
interesting
- soyuz
- Location: Iceland
- Main keyboard: buckling ******
- Main mouse: mouse bad. keybor good.
- Favorite switch: alp white damp
Until your post it was pretty much generally accepted that this thread was faked, it would be really nice to get confirmation if it wasn't faked.fool wrote: 03 Jan 2023, 17:39 The day I have the needed enthusiasm to clean it up I think I can take some picures. This thread is already years old so don't hold your breath![]()
quick edit: Also uncleaned is preferable, helps determine whether they were lubed in the factory by Alps
Last edited by soyuz on 03 Jan 2023, 18:03, edited 1 time in total.
Sorry for giving the wrong picture. It's not that I don't want to. I have disassembled and washed many keyboards and know it's not quicky well done. Just saying it's not happening today or tomorrow, but when it happens, I will give more details. This keyboard is a part of another project documented here https://www.vogons.org/viewtopic.php?f=46&t=91902doomsday_device wrote: 03 Jan 2023, 17:42you joined today only to post in this thread about this switches and dont want to give any more details?fool wrote: 03 Jan 2023, 17:39 The day I have the needed enthusiasm to clean it up I think I can take some picures. This thread is already years old so don't hold your breath![]()
interesting
- soyuz
- Location: Iceland
- Main keyboard: buckling ******
- Main mouse: mouse bad. keybor good.
- Favorite switch: alp white damp
Ah sorry, I edited my post while you were replying - uncleaned is preferable, lets us know whether they were lubed at the factoryfool wrote: 03 Jan 2023, 18:00Sorry for giving the wrong picture. It's not that I don't want to. I have disassembled and washed many keyboards and know it's not quicky well done. Just saying it's not happening today or tomorrow, but when it happens, I will give more details. This keyboard is a part of another project documented here https://www.vogons.org/viewtopic.php?f=46&t=91902doomsday_device wrote: 03 Jan 2023, 17:42you joined today only to post in this thread about this switches and dont want to give any more details?fool wrote: 03 Jan 2023, 17:39 The day I have the needed enthusiasm to clean it up I think I can take some picures. This thread is already years old so don't hold your breath![]()
interesting
Thanks for the info. I'll leave switches uncleaned because those feel OK and I like it more original. Some are a bit sticky, but I think those will get better enough in use.soyuz wrote: 03 Jan 2023, 18:04 Ah sorry, I edited my post while you were replying - uncleaned is preferable, lets us know whether they were lubed at the factory
- photekq
- Cherry Picker
- Location: United Kingdom
- Main keyboard: Various Cherry Corp keyboards
- Main mouse: Razer Deathadder (1st gen)
- Favorite switch: Nixdorf 'Soft Touch' MX Black (55g springs)
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
For what it's worth, the pictures we really need are detailed and well-focused pictures of the slider. A slider could be removed without disassembling the entire keyboard or desoldering anything; you just need to remove one of the switch tops from the plate.fool wrote: 03 Jan 2023, 18:00 Sorry for giving the wrong picture. It's not that I don't want to. I have disassembled and washed many keyboards and know it's not quicky well done. Just saying it's not happening today or tomorrow, but when it happens, I will give more details.
I'll look forward to seeing some pictures sometime soon, hopefully
![Mr. Green :mrgreen:](./images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif)
I had some time today to clean this keyboard externally. I must admit my camera is almost as old as this keyboard... so detailed and well-focused I can only dream of. Here's a few shots, sorry for the quality. Please ask if you need shot from one certain spot etc. I may have bought a new camera since.
- Attachments
-
- IMG_0028.JPG (364.25 KiB) Viewed 5042 times
-
- IMG_0027.JPG (511.37 KiB) Viewed 5042 times
-
- IMG_0026.JPG (362.52 KiB) Viewed 5042 times
-
- IMG_0035.JPG (301.07 KiB) Viewed 5042 times
-
- IMG_0032.JPG (234 KiB) Viewed 5042 times
-
- IMG_0037.JPG (340.97 KiB) Viewed 5042 times
- darkcruix
- Location: Germany
- Main keyboard: Brand New Model F F77 Keyboard
- Main mouse: Logitech MX Master
- Favorite switch: Ellipse version of Buckling Spring / BeamSpring
- DT Pro Member: 0209
I wish there would be a resource from ALPS available working there during those days, when the switches were produced. Information or more details would be so interesting (e,g. were red sliders used for pre-production switches?). There must be the one or other person around who has that information; not everything can be lost in the void of space and time ![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_e_smile.gif)
Huge thanks for the detailed photos. Highly interesting stuff you have there.
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_e_smile.gif)
Huge thanks for the detailed photos. Highly interesting stuff you have there.
- zrrion
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: F122
- Main mouse: Microsoft IntelliMouse
- Favorite switch: ALPS SKCC Cream
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
My guess for why these are a thing but why they aren't common would be that Alps wanted to develop a heavier clicky switch to serve as a space bar switch the same way that SKCL creams are used alongside SKCL greens. Alps seems to have abandoned doing this on basically all of their boards from what I can tell after a certain point so it's possible they ditched the switch line before they ever actually marketed it. For low volume switches like alternate action switches or dual action switches you can't replace those with something else, but for heavier versions you could easily just use the same switch everywhere and it would be fine.XTaran wrote: 08 Dec 2018, 22:20Oh, and the springs in these red Alps seem stronger than those in white Alps. We had two vintage white Alps keyboards at the meetup today, too, and compared directly.
If typists didn't like how light blues were when on the space bar (when having a heavier spacebar was far more common it might have been more of an issue) Alps might have started to developed reds to go with them before changing direction, killing reds as a product, and just making whites a little bit heavier than blues so that they would be better on the space bar while still being largely suitable for the rest of the board as well. After doing that they'd have a bunch of reds in stock that they weren't going to market so they put them in a line of boards they were producing in house and called it a day
That or Toshiba just wanted a heavier clicky and paid for Alps to make it heavier for them. Who knows.
-
- Location: Philadelphia
- Main keyboard: IBM MOPAR FSSK
- Main mouse: Logitech G502 Lightspeed
- Favorite switch: Brown Alps
- Contact:
What an awesome find, great to see this years old mystery finally resolved. Would love a typing test!
- june bug
- Favorite switch: they're all pretty great
- Contact:
this is awesome, thank y'all for sharing
- flowerlandfilms
- Location: Australia
- Main keyboard: Silicon Graphics AT-101
- Main mouse: Logitech MX Vertical
- Favorite switch: the on/off switch
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
Can I ask why Red Alps have not been added to the wiki yet? After 6 years somebody else must have acquired one and be prepared to take detailed photos/measurements?