Best vintage keyboard 2014
- webwit
- Wild Duck
- Location: The Netherlands
- Main keyboard: Model F62
- Favorite switch: IBM beam spring
- DT Pro Member: 0000
- Contact:
Please vote for your winner of the award for the Best vintage keyboard in 2014.
By voting in this category you can win a vintage keyboard of your choice from Electronics Plus!
This is the final round. See the first round and second round for reference.
The final round ends on Monday 8 December, 20:00hrs UTC. You can change your vote until the end of the round. The winner and full results will be released soon after the vote closes.
The official nominees are, as presented by macmakkara and Muirium:
IBM 4704 "Kishsaver" family
Before the IBM [wiki]Model M[/wiki], there was the even meaner, tougher and rarer Model F. Until recently, Model Fs were all quite large. But last year, thanks to Kishy and SmallFry's detective work, the "Kishsaver" 4704 series burst onto the scene. These are seriously rare and high end, metal bodied keyboards. And with Xwhatsit's controller inside, they are perfectly usable today! If only there were enough of them to go round…
A size for everyone. Thirty years ago! 80s IBM wherever did you go?
IBM 3276 & 3278 beamspring series
Continuing with IBM's very finest, we go back to the granddaddy of them all: the legendary Beamsprings. The 3276 and 3278 lines are hardcore keyboard dinosaurs. Seriously, you should hear them in action. Even a Model M sounds quiet and humble in comparison! And yet they are unsurpassed in key feel, and type so smoothly your fingers will thank you just as much as your ears take a pounding. And if noise really is music to you, engage the solenoid!
Beastly! Beastly good.
IBM Model F Unsaver
The IBM trifecta is complete with the board with the perfect name: the 104 key Model F Space Unsaver! The reference is to the famous SSK. This big board is nowhere near as small, but compared to the 122 key battleship it's descended from, the name is still deserved. The Unsaver has the sweet, precise, sharp feel of capsense buckling spring, and more function keys than you can shake a stick at. All without the excess of a numberpad! Keep that mouse hand nice and close. But your screen, well, not so quite.
So Nasty. So Nice!
Cherry MX 5000
Oh there is one black sheep. Cherry snuck into IBM's party with a daring, delicious and rightly famous board of its own. The MX5000, also known as G80-5000, also known as the Cherry ErgoPlus or simply the Cherry 5000; it's "the squid" in Korea. This is the quintessential Ergonomic spilt mechanical keyboard. It's also nightmarishly hard to obtain! It comes with vintage MX browns, and with a sense of bittersweet sorrow from whoever you're buying it from, in exchange for all the cash.
Sweet, sweet unobtanium. We meet once again!
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- Location: geekhack ergonomics subforum
- Favorite switch: Alps plate spring; clicky SMK
- DT Pro Member: -
Most of these keyboards, when fully restored, end up close to what they were like in the 80s (or the mid-90s in the case of the MX-5000). There’s nothing 2014 about them.
But people have really taken the 4704 boards and run with them this year, and the results are unique, special, and truly a product of 2014.
But people have really taken the 4704 boards and run with them this year, and the results are unique, special, and truly a product of 2014.
-
- Location: geekhack ergonomics subforum
- Favorite switch: Alps plate spring; clicky SMK
- DT Pro Member: -
Parak did, http://deskthority.net/photos-f62/ibm-6 ... t8502.htmlJBert wrote: ↑Who made that 4704 family picture, or where is it from?
- webwit
- Wild Duck
- Location: The Netherlands
- Main keyboard: Model F62
- Favorite switch: IBM beam spring
- DT Pro Member: 0000
- Contact:
The vote closes on Monday 8 December at 20:00 UTC. Vote now!
The two nominees with currently the most votes are (in alphabetical order):
The two nominees with currently the most votes are (in alphabetical order):
Spoiler: