cherry MX1A - ?
- yab8433408
- Location: 中国 湖北 Hubei China
- DT Pro Member: -
cherry MX1A - ?
不好意识 我不会英文 我暂时只能将中文通过谷歌翻译与大家交流~~~
Good sense I do I will not only be Chinese English via Google Translate to share with you ~ ~ ~
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- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: Custom
- Main mouse: IBM TrackPoint IV
- Favorite switch: Cherry MX Clicky
- DT Pro Member: -
Ah, the infamous teal / dark-blues. Very nice.
- Daniel Beardsmore
- Location: Hertfordshire, England
- Main keyboard: Filco Majestouch 1 (home)/Poker II backlit (work)
- Main mouse: MS IMO 1.1
- Favorite switch: Probably not whatever I wrote here
- DT Pro Member: -
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According to sixty, the click collar doesn't move. However, there are no further details about that as to why it doesn't move. The small bump on the slider is supposed to indicate a switch with movement differential (hysteresis), which implies that it must be a clicky switch; as such, one has to wonder if the click collars are jammed.
yab's first picture is confusing as it's not clear where it came from and who wrote that. They give 1983 as the year of introduction for MX, while we have 1984. However, most of the Cherry information on the wiki is not traceable back to any source, so it's hard to tell whether it's genuine or not.
I suspect that we won't know for sure until we turn up more Cherry catalogues.
yab's first picture is confusing as it's not clear where it came from and who wrote that. They give 1983 as the year of introduction for MX, while we have 1984. However, most of the Cherry information on the wiki is not traceable back to any source, so it's hard to tell whether it's genuine or not.
I suspect that we won't know for sure until we turn up more Cherry catalogues.
Last edited by Daniel Beardsmore on 27 Oct 2013, 12:32, edited 1 time in total.
- Broadmonkey
- Fancy Rank
- Location: Denmark
- Main keyboard: Whitefox
- Main mouse: Zowie FK2
- Favorite switch: MX Black
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If the slider doesn't move I guess it would feel the same as the Jailhouse Blues mod, where you deliberately jam the slider from moving upwards again in order to lower the total travel of the stem, and thus create a higher actuation point (<1mm compared to ~2mm)