Semi-silent tactile switches w/o mushiness?
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- Location: Germany
Hey there,
do you know any tactile semi-silent switches that are noticeably quieter than average while not feeling mushy?
I recently tried the Geon HG Yellow with the "innovative" Haimu stem design. While being dead silent the typing experience is not too impressive imo. The bottom out does still feel quite mushy, like typing on a conventional rubber-damped switch.
Are there any switches that combine the best of both worlds? Tactile, noticeably quieter than average with still a good typing experience?
Appreciate your help!
Regards,
Mumpitz
do you know any tactile semi-silent switches that are noticeably quieter than average while not feeling mushy?
I recently tried the Geon HG Yellow with the "innovative" Haimu stem design. While being dead silent the typing experience is not too impressive imo. The bottom out does still feel quite mushy, like typing on a conventional rubber-damped switch.
Are there any switches that combine the best of both worlds? Tactile, noticeably quieter than average with still a good typing experience?
Appreciate your help!
Regards,
Mumpitz
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- Location: CZ
- Main keyboard: Kinesis Advantage2, JIS ThinkPad,…
- Main mouse: I like (some) trackballs, e.g., L-Trac
- Favorite switch: #vintage ghost Cherry MX Black (+ thick POM caps)
- DT Pro Member: -
I wish I could tell, but the fact of the matter is that my quietest keyboard has been ErgoDox with vintage MX Black switches that I didn't bother dampening in the end. Most of the noise comes from my fingertips hitting keycaps.
Actually, that kind of answers the question: you can dampen the upstroke, sure, and use springs that help prevent you from bottoming out; that avoids both the respective noise and the mushiness associated with dampening it.
Actually, that kind of answers the question: you can dampen the upstroke, sure, and use springs that help prevent you from bottoming out; that avoids both the respective noise and the mushiness associated with dampening it.
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- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: Model M SSK Industrial
- Main mouse: G502
- Favorite switch: Buckling Spring
If you're willing you could stem swap the Haimu silent switches with something like an MX clear stem. The bottom housing has holes in it that makes the switch quieter, so that could work for you.
Lubing the switches and/or putting foam in the case can also help lower the overall volume of the keyboard as well.
Lubing the switches and/or putting foam in the case can also help lower the overall volume of the keyboard as well.
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- Location: Germany
Thanks for your replies!
Lubing might be a further thing to consider, indeed.
Ok. But that would require stronger springs and higher actuation force, right?
Is there anything you can recommend? Something tactile with roughly 50-60g?Delta Research wrote: ↑26 Aug 2023, 21:04If you're willing you could stem swap the Haimu silent switches with something like an MX clear stem. The bottom housing has holes in it that makes the switch quieter, so that could work for you.
My board is damped quite well already: Monsgeek M1. I feel like the switch itself is more important here.Delta Research wrote: ↑26 Aug 2023, 21:04putting foam in the case can also help lower the overall volume
Lubing might be a further thing to consider, indeed.
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- Location: CZ
- Main keyboard: Kinesis Advantage2, JIS ThinkPad,…
- Main mouse: I like (some) trackballs, e.g., L-Trac
- Favorite switch: #vintage ghost Cherry MX Black (+ thick POM caps)
- DT Pro Member: -
Not quite. There's the spring length too; or it can be nonlinear.
See, my vintage MX Black switches have springs swapped for old sprit's 78g springs inspired by Cherry MX Clear. These have a steeper force curve, i.e., they're relatively easy to compress early on, but the force ramps up quickly, so they're relatively harder to bottom out.
There are more options these days.
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- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: Model M SSK Industrial
- Main mouse: G502
- Favorite switch: Buckling Spring
Some are objectively right.
- engr
- Location: USA
I have only tried Topre, so I can't comment on how Niz feels, but I can see how its sound can be appealing. It sounds... fuller? Meatier?
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- Location: Germany
Tried the U4TX meanwhile and kinda like them. But the travel is rather on the shorter side. Its spec'd with 3.7mm but I can only measure 3.3mm. Sound is quite nice, though. It strikes the middle between loud and quiet while feeling more or less clean on the bottom out. More or less, because there is still a tiny bit of rubber on the stem facing downward (Cherry MX Silent style). Nowhere near the mushiness of regular silent switches though.
My next candidate will be the Kailh Deep Sea. Might remove its rubber on the bottom to make it feel less damped while maintaining the upstroke dampening.
My next candidate will be the Kailh Deep Sea. Might remove its rubber on the bottom to make it feel less damped while maintaining the upstroke dampening.
- Muirium
- µ
- Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
- Main keyboard: HHKB Type-S with Bluetooth by Hasu
- Main mouse: Apple Magic Mouse
- Favorite switch: Gotta Try 'Em All
- DT Pro Member: µ
I know this will sound fanboy, but it's my honest opinion whenever this comes up: different switches in different chassis is no comparison at all, especially in a vid and not in person.engr wrote: ↑01 Sep 2023, 20:20I have only tried Topre, so I can't comment on how Niz feels, but I can see how its sound can be appealing. It sounds... fuller? Meatier?
But FWIW I really don't like the way that Niz 'sounds.' Way too smacky.
To be fair, they're also hammering the shit out of their Realforce. Easy on those keys, cowboy, this ain't no MX clear!
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- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: Drop Alt High Profile
- Main mouse: Logitech M570
- Favorite switch: Glorious Panda
There’s some setting most keyboard YouTubers are using that amplifies even the tiniest sound. I’ve used regular 55g Topre and 45g silenced Topre and neither sounds like that unless I have my ear literally pressed to the keyboard. From a normal sitting position, either is whisper-quiet and I’d feel comfortable using one in a library. Each is as quiet as normal rubber dome switches and is slightly quieter than scissor switches.engr wrote: ↑01 Sep 2023, 20:20I have only tried Topre, so I can't comment on how Niz feels, but I can see how its sound can be appealing. It sounds... fuller? Meatier?
Also, I just got some Boba U4 silent and they’re…silent. They feel like a hybrid of a Holy Panda and Topre and are about 90% as good as either.
- Muirium
- µ
- Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
- Main keyboard: HHKB Type-S with Bluetooth by Hasu
- Main mouse: Apple Magic Mouse
- Favorite switch: Gotta Try 'Em All
- DT Pro Member: µ
I often literally use my silenced HHKB in a library:
And it's definitely quieter than most MacBooks. Some people piledrive those with their two good typing fingers!
And it's definitely quieter than most MacBooks. Some people piledrive those with their two good typing fingers!
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- Location: Bensalem, PA, USA
- Main keyboard: IBM Model M
- Main mouse: Kensington Slimblade Trackball
- Favorite switch: Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
Matias makes a quiet click switch, which is not bad.
I think the quietest mechanical I own that doesn't feel "mushy" to me is the Apple Extended Keyboard II with cream alps switches.
But that's a beast of a keyboard. Not something you would carry around in your bag.
I think the quietest mechanical I own that doesn't feel "mushy" to me is the Apple Extended Keyboard II with cream alps switches.
But that's a beast of a keyboard. Not something you would carry around in your bag.
- guidemetothelight
- Location: Germany
- Main mouse: Fantech XD5
- Favorite switch: SKCM Brown
Or just use this.Delta Research wrote: ↑26 Aug 2023, 21:04If you're willing you could stem swap the Haimu silent switches with something like an MX clear stem.
Great switch. no mush, good tactility, affordable
Edit: Drink Coffee first, then read DT threads.
- Muirium
- µ
- Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
- Main keyboard: HHKB Type-S with Bluetooth by Hasu
- Main mouse: Apple Magic Mouse
- Favorite switch: Gotta Try 'Em All
- DT Pro Member: µ
DT's where you come to once you're caffeinated. Ease yourself awake by browsing keyboard porn first, before tangling up in all the words.