09 Dec 2013, 02:55
I probably started the whole "vintage" / "modern" thing, as when I first started looking into this, I couldn't find any of the "dual magnet" ones newer than about 1980 and none of the "normal" ones older than about 1979. Calling them vintage and modern when there is a clear changeover makes sense as the switch operating principles, pinout, etc are all the same.
Further research kept putting the oldest "modern" switches futher back, and newest "vintage" ones further forward until it became clear that the distinction is something different.
I dont think there are many pictures online yet (other than the ones I took, which might not have been uploaded) but the round stem ones have what appears to be very old school hall effect sensors. There's a little window where you can clearly see the components. The switches I had been calling "modern" the hall effect sensor is a small black dot of epoxy (or similar) like you see in more modern ICs. Other than the convenient date thing, this was the primary motivation for naming them as I did.
Like I said, though, the "vintage" / "modern" thing doesn't really make sense now, as there seems to have been a large number of overlap years.
Then, I floated the idea of "plate mount" vs PCB mount, but that doesn't make sense either. The "vintage" ones are mounted to a plate after a fashion, and the "modern" ones are more traditionally plate mounted. Very frustrating.
The "dual magnet" idea I like a lot, but I fee there should be a more descriptive name for the other ones. I mean, if we only knew about two types of alps, and called one "alps contact switches" what would we do when more are found?
Also, should we include switch options like latching and clicky in with the "honeywell hall effect" "plate mounted" modern" style, or are they sufficiently different enough to merit their own name?
I propose "dual magnet" and "single magnet" be the differentiator for now. I can provide switch disassembly photos of the dual magnet version, because they are dead simple to take apart. I've taken apart an entire KB worth for cleaning.