Daniel Beardsmore wrote:Having used it all afternoon, my feelings at this moment:
For a quiet board, Topre feels 10× better — so much smoother.
Matias quiet switches feel gritty and rough. Better than the black Alps in the AT101/2W, but but not well-oiled smooth and clean like blue Alps. It may well be that they break in after a while, and smooth out. I've never tried brand new blue Alps, only very worn switches.
They also feel lighter than the specifications suggests. They're nowhere near as balky as I was fearing for a 60 cN switch, and it's not fatiguing my hands too much, unlike when I started using Topre or spent time with the Tactile Pro 3. Still waiting for my FK-2002 from Ascaii, so that I can compare its white Alps switches with blue Alps, and compare the stiffer white Alps with Fuhua Alps and with Matias clones.
I'm finding typing on the Quiet Pro tough going — I'm making a lot of mistakes and fumbling over keys, and missing keystrokes. It remains to be seen how I feel about the switches after more use, as I'm used to Cherry MX, which is so light.
I also find the metallic sound of Topre to be soothing, and I love the sound of MX brown, and its light, clean feel. The Quiet Pro sound has no soul — it's just a dry plastic rattle. Nothing wrong with that, and it lives up to its name (exceptionally quiet for mechanical), but I like something with feeling.
My Filco has broken again (same key has died) so I will take the opportunity to send it back to Keyboardco and have them fix it again, and in the meantime I will see how I get on with the Quiet Pro.
Interesting to hear your impressions. I wouldn't describe my switches as feeling scratchy, they seem too wobbly and free-flowing for that.
I've discovered that not only do the switch stems have a lot of play to them (which I can only assume is by design), but the switches themselves are quite loose on my model. I'm putting in an RMA request because despite being fun to type on, I don't consider the overall build quality and finishing to be acceptable for a $170 keyboard. There was already the issue of the crooked keys, so the loose switches definitely swayed my decision.
Run this full-screen and let me know what you think:
I used cosmetic tweezers to illustrate that not much force was being applied. The red gunk isn't mine (came free with the keyboard!).
I'd still love to try these switches on a custom kb, like Matt3o's project.