Beamspring USB controller
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- Location: Houston, Texas
- Main keyboard: IBM Bigfoot
- Main mouse: CST trackball
- Favorite switch: IBM Model F
- DT Pro Member: -
Sounds good. We can leave now before the nasty slugfest over the Displaywriter keyboard gets any uglier. (Little do they know that I have entered a $500 snipe bid myself. )xwhatsit wrote: BTW: we might try and shift discussion over to here: http://deskthority.net/marketplace-f11/ ... t7993.html to avoid duplication between the different ibm-capsense-usb controllers.
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I'm kidding, of course. I won't bid again. I'll let others get a chance for clicky goodness.wheybags wrote:I want to beg you but I won't because I feel bad about what happened last time ;_;
(besides, I just foolishly bought a green screen terminal for some unknown reason and the shipping is a killer)
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- Location: Amsterdam
- Main keyboard: variable: beamspring, Northgate, IBM SSK, Topre
- Main mouse: CST L-Trac
- Favorite switch: beamspring, dampened complicated white Alps, Topre
- DT Pro Member: -
Curious which one you bought !mr_a500 wrote:I'm kidding, of course. I won't bid again. I'll let others get a chance for clicky goodness.
(besides, I just foolishly bought a green screen terminal for some unknown reason and the shipping is a killer)
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It's not a very nice one, not even the older style that I like. It's a rather silly purchase really. I already have the keyboard and they were selling the terminal without keyboard, fairly cheap, and I thought, "Oh, I can finally use that keyboard."
It was only after I bought it and calculated the shipping + customs + exchange that I said, "Why the hell did I want that?"
It was only after I bought it and calculated the shipping + customs + exchange that I said, "Why the hell did I want that?"
- dorkvader
- Main keyboard: Unicomp
- Main mouse: CST 1550
- Favorite switch: Buckling Spring over Capacitave. (Model F)
- DT Pro Member: -
The Displaywriter is pretty small: it's only about 2-3 cm wider than an M.xwhatsit wrote:I wouldn't mind a Displaywriter; the layout looks pretty good, and it's probably no wider than a 122-key Model F? Being the last beamspring IBM made it should either be the peak of quality or the cheapest and nastiest.
As far as quality: it's mixed. It has a plastic case, but it's a really really nice plastic case. There's no solenoid, but it's a decent speaker instead.
So in some ways it's worse. In other ways it's better. I really like how they slayed out the sense/strobes. The key layout makes a lot of sense as well (and some aspects were later appropriated into the Wheelwriters and later IBM typewriters) I really like the layout of the funciton keys. The left ones were re-used in the PC and the right ones just "make sense".
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- Location: Houston, Texas
- Main keyboard: IBM Bigfoot
- Main mouse: CST trackball
- Favorite switch: IBM Model F
- DT Pro Member: -
So who is the lucky bloke taking home the Big White Whale? Was anyone here crazy enough to pay $200?
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- Location: Amsterdam
- Main keyboard: variable: beamspring, Northgate, IBM SSK, Topre
- Main mouse: CST L-Trac
- Favorite switch: beamspring, dampened complicated white Alps, Topre
- DT Pro Member: -
Yeah, I'm very curious if it was someone from here too ! And that price, that's what they are going for these days, no ? With the current level of interest in beamspring boards, it is going to be hard to pick one up for a low price..quantalume wrote:So who is the lucky bloke taking home the Big White Whale? Was anyone here crazy enough to pay $200?
And it also shows that bidding at the last minute doesn't make things cheaper when there is more people interested ?
great ! this will drive prices up even further !REVENGE wrote:Well Tom, congratulations(?) on making Hackaday!
- 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
Pound for pound, a great beast like that isn't so bad for the price, I guess.
(No, it wasn't me. This is one beam spring I've seen, and know I can't fantasise about being smaller so I'd actually use it!)
(No, it wasn't me. This is one beam spring I've seen, and know I can't fantasise about being smaller so I'd actually use it!)
- Game Theory
- Mr. Despair
- Location: Madison WI US
- Main keyboard: Majestouch Convertible 2 or Beam Spring 5251
- Main mouse: Logitech G900
- Favorite switch: MX Blue in terms of MX
- DT Pro Member: 0008
Wasn't me I resisted jumping in.
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- Location: Houston, Texas
- Main keyboard: IBM Bigfoot
- Main mouse: CST trackball
- Favorite switch: IBM Model F
- DT Pro Member: -
By that metric, those old boards ought to be worth three or four HHKBs, eh?Muirium wrote:Pound for pound, a great beast like that isn't so bad for the price, I guess.
(No, it wasn't me. This is one beam spring I've seen, and know I can't fantasise about being smaller so I'd actually use it!)
I think you've already got one of the most ideal keyboards in the Kishy. The more I type on the beamspring, the more I tend to prefer the Model F and M boards. There's a lot of side-to-side slop in the beamspring mechanism, and the let-off isn't as sharp and crisp.
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You don't like the side-to-side slop? Sometimes I just rest my fingers on the keyboard and shift back and forth to get the lovely rattle sound. (like "dice in a box")quantalume wrote:The more I type on the beamspring, the more I tend to prefer the Model F and M boards. There's a lot of side-to-side slop in the beamspring mechanism, and the let-off isn't as sharp and crisp.
I agree it's not as crispy as a Model F, but I prefer the solid feel of the keycaps on the beam spring. And of course, the look is so much nicer than the boring beige of the Model F.
- 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
Thanks, so do I! When Tinnie first announced his haul of them, I was sold on first sight. The wee thing is an absolutely killer package.quantalume wrote:I think you've already got one of the most ideal keyboards in the Kishy.
But then there's always someone out there who will have you outgunned:
Compact beam springs! When will it end!webwit wrote:Hmm, would it work with this 5251 66-key variant?
The great white that I've fondled a few times feels damn nice to type on, as far as I'm concerned. Beam springs have that swing to them, like a piano or indeed a manual typewriter, which buckling spring doesn't even try to replicate. They feel a bit like a Topre to me, oddly enough. So I'm still after one, someday.
Let's just browse Webwit's catalogue…
None quite as tight as a Kishy, of course. But I do like the idea of mounting a chunky board inside a desk!webwit wrote:IBM beam spring 60%:
IBM 3741 Data Station
Space Cadet color style/IBM/60% for the win!
IBM 129 Combination Keyboard
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I recently found a Beamspring in a bin at work. I posted over on the /r/MechanicalKeyboards subreddit, under the same username, and they pointed me to this thread. I was wondering if there had been any changes to the controller other than Firmware since the Rev4 board was released? If nothing has changed where can I find the BoM? Thanks in advance, I'll post pics one the process is finished.
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- Location: NZ
- Main keyboard: IBM 3727 beamspring (converted to USB)
- Main mouse: What's a mouse for?
- Favorite switch: Beamspring
- DT Pro Member: -
A beamspring in a bin! Some people have all the luck...
No changes to the hardware since Rev4 (although I've designed a solenoid driver board that plugs into the Rev4 to fire the solenoid in a loud and obnoxious fashion).
If you're going to build one yourself, you might want to take a look at the Kicad project so you can do a proper BOM (there are some old BOMs floating around from earlier revisions but there is newer stuff).
By the way, since doing controllers for the Displaywriter and Model Fs etc., I've combined all the separate threads to here: http://deskthority.net/for-sale-f55/xwh ... t7993.html . I'm also running a new batch-build/group buy thing so I can build a controller for you if you'd prefer.
No changes to the hardware since Rev4 (although I've designed a solenoid driver board that plugs into the Rev4 to fire the solenoid in a loud and obnoxious fashion).
If you're going to build one yourself, you might want to take a look at the Kicad project so you can do a proper BOM (there are some old BOMs floating around from earlier revisions but there is newer stuff).
By the way, since doing controllers for the Displaywriter and Model Fs etc., I've combined all the separate threads to here: http://deskthority.net/for-sale-f55/xwh ... t7993.html . I'm also running a new batch-build/group buy thing so I can build a controller for you if you'd prefer.