Sanyo MBC-2000 / 3000 keyboard

User avatar
seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

31 Jan 2015, 22:06

This is the keyboard for this Sanyo MBC-2000 / 3000 computer.
SanyoMBC-2000a.JPG
SanyoMBC-2000a.JPG (179.5 KiB) Viewed 9592 times
Another one found by guk and bought by me. I knew pretty much what to expect from this, but I am pleasently suprised. I do not know how old this is and cannot find a reference as yet. The case consists of top and bottom parts both made of sturdy metal.The PCB sits on a metal plate inside the metal case. It´s a heavy keyboard! You can see the sticker on the PCB. The other side reads a serial too and the word "Buhinmen". I´d like to know what "Handamen" and "Buhinmen" mean. It´s got nothing to do with noodels that´s for sure. The switch is clicky, feels like it needs lubing for sure. The keycaps are what makes this awesome for me. The colors remind me of my childhood, it´s a little Star Trekish. I´ve never seen caps like this, I mean the inside of the caps, a kind of "insert mold". The connector has asian symbols on it. I cannot see a controller or any chips on the PCB!
IMGP8470.JPG
IMGP8470.JPG (950.32 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8466.JPG
IMGP8466.JPG (949.12 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8478.JPG
IMGP8478.JPG (945.63 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8376.JPG
IMGP8376.JPG (945.03 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8379.JPG
IMGP8379.JPG (955.46 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8387.JPG
IMGP8387.JPG (955.11 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8403.JPG
IMGP8403.JPG (976.08 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8400.JPG
IMGP8400.JPG (975.91 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8398.JPG
IMGP8398.JPG (963.11 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8456.JPG
IMGP8456.JPG (947.22 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8442.JPG
IMGP8442.JPG (943.7 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8443.JPG
IMGP8443.JPG (944.5 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8435.JPG
IMGP8435.JPG (898.14 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
IMGP8490.JPG
IMGP8490.JPG (973.06 KiB) Viewed 10352 times
Last edited by seebart on 20 Oct 2016, 22:14, edited 4 times in total.

pcaro

31 Jan 2015, 22:19

Pretty keycaps!

User avatar
guk
1896 Vintage Reds

31 Jan 2015, 22:27

Great pictures as always, Seebart! Found this: * BUHIN is Parts * BUHINMEN is Parts side
http://park10.wakwak.com/~jpspace/key/k ... m77av.html
The keycaps are pretty indeed, as is the pcb.

User avatar
seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

31 Jan 2015, 22:28

pcaro wrote: Pretty keycaps!
thanks, too bad they won`t fit on anything else! :lol:
guk wrote: Great pictures as always, Seebart! Found this: * BUHIN is Parts * BUHINMEN is Parts side
http://park10.wakwak.com/~jpspace/key/k ... m77av.html
The keycaps are pretty indeed, as is the pcb.
good link, "parts side" eh? I`ve seen keyboards with more parts on that side though.Doesn't even have a controller! :evilgeek:

User avatar
copter
Last Man Standing

31 Jan 2015, 23:08

Very nice! Those caps remind me too from childhood, but maybe more about Japanese cartoons than Star Trek.

User avatar
Muirium
µ

01 Feb 2015, 00:05

You got a nice one here, Seebart. Great caps, a metal case, vintage clicky switches *and* no weird old controller to get in the way of adapting it for USB. I wish I was as lucky with the Honeywell! The matrix is exposed and ready to put straight into a Teensy. I wouldn't count on too much rollover though: I can't see diodes on the PCB, but maybe they're on the other side.

User avatar
seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

01 Feb 2015, 00:17

yup this one is "Teensy worthy" for sure!

User avatar
Muirium
µ

01 Feb 2015, 01:32

Looks like 32 pins. You'll need a Teensy++ for sure. None of that Pro Micro fluff!

Image

I suspect the cloners do something to pit against the ++ as well, actually. But if you need the real deal, I have some…

User avatar
copter
Last Man Standing

01 Feb 2015, 10:34

Looking at the PCB's 4 soldering points per switch. it might indicate that diode is on the other side.

User avatar
Muirium
µ

01 Feb 2015, 10:37

Yeah, I hope that's the case. But sometimes you'll find bridging wires installed instead. MX switches have a little slot for that. And several switch types have more than 2 pins anyway.

Speaking of which, I'm useless at (unusual) switch recognition. But here's the closest looking kind I can find on the wiki. Drumroll…

Image

Alps Integrated Dome! I don't think it's really those, though. I've got some, and they're as clicky as Topre: not at all. They do have multiple contacts on the bottom:

Image

Notably, that keyboard has no ICs on the PCB either. But apparently SIX contacts per switch!

User avatar
seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

01 Feb 2015, 11:17

That switch looks very similar Mu! I'll have to take another look at it!

User avatar
guk
1896 Vintage Reds

01 Feb 2015, 12:42


User avatar
Muirium
µ

01 Feb 2015, 12:53

Promising! Especially as it's Fujitsu. But (from the wiki) supposedly the only clicky version is the 3rd generation, which has a different mount. As HaaTa said, cruciform mounts were very common in the late 70s. Before MX came along to own them!

User avatar
seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

01 Feb 2015, 13:21

ahhh there we have it! Very good find guk. That's the little brother of mine with the same looking switch! Same Fujitsu series keyboard no question.

User avatar
idollar
i$

01 Feb 2015, 13:56

This is indeed a very nice keyboard

User avatar
Daniel Beardsmore

01 Feb 2015, 13:56

Muirium wrote: Notably, that keyboard has no ICs on the PCB either. But apparently SIX contacts per switch!
Six contacts? They all have four legs. The clusters of six are deceptive: you're seeing the diodes in between switches.

User avatar
Muirium
µ

01 Feb 2015, 14:28

Aye. I was too subtle with my distinction between contacts and legs! Two contacts of every cluster of six on that board do indeed belong to a diode. Which suggests that even seeing 4 contacts per switch on a PCB is no guarantee there are diodes installed. Some switches just like to have a lot of legs.

User avatar
Daniel Beardsmore

01 Feb 2015, 15:23

Mitsumi miniature mechanical has six legs:
Mitsumi miniature mechanical -- circuit diagram.png
Mitsumi miniature mechanical -- circuit diagram.png (1.68 KiB) Viewed 10137 times
PCB-mount switches tend to have either fixing pins (e.g. MX, ML) or extra legs (e.g. KLT, SKFL, SKEx) with the latter being more common.

Integrated diodes are comparatively rare, but a few switches support them, including MX and Marquardt Two Finger.

There's a challenge for someone: illustrate all the PCB arrangements for all the switches out there.

User avatar
copter
Last Man Standing

01 Feb 2015, 15:29

4 contacts is not the key to know is there diodes or not, but above in the picture PCB routing suggests that there are diodes, when looking how the wiring has been done on the bottom layer.

User avatar
seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

01 Feb 2015, 18:29

when I was cleaning the keyboard yesterday I kept noticing how sharp the tips of the sliders are, I almost cut myself once or twice. Just now when I took another look real close you can see that the very top of the slider has a really small fine metal tip in the center, you can see it in these pictures. Also notice the "F" marking on the switch housing.

Also the top of the cross on the slider is not flat like the Alps integrated dome in our wiki. Yet on the Fujitsu
Leaf Spring Switch wiki page the illustration of the 1st Gen. switch does have some sort of a tiny tip on the slider!
IMG_20150201_181511.jpg
IMG_20150201_181511.jpg (704.37 KiB) Viewed 10107 times
IMG_20150201_181612.jpg
IMG_20150201_181612.jpg (1003.23 KiB) Viewed 10107 times

User avatar
HaaTa
Master Kiibohd Hunter

01 Feb 2015, 19:40

Ugh, yep. I've cut myself a few times on these switches. Those little razor blades...

Most definitely a 1st Gen Fujitsu Leaf Spring. The connector may be a bit tricky to find fcn-365p032-ag, but I actually think you still might be able to get some. At least your keyboard doesn't have a controller. Mine just has this really shitty 1KRO ASCII out protocol that really isn't worth converting.

Also, can you check to see if any of the keycaps are doubleshot-engraved?

User avatar
seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

01 Feb 2015, 19:58

hey thanks for the feedback, now we`re getting somewhere! The following keycaps are engraved:

Tab´s next to spacebar
grey CR
grey ENT
orange CE
orange INS DEL
orange BS _
the top navigational arrow

I find it odd that only a few seemingly random doubleshots are engraved! Any idea why? Yeah I´m lucky with this not having a controller in the way, this is worth getting a Teensy++.

haha I should have read our wiki more carefully, the answer is there:
Used a cross slider with part of the leaf spring mechanism embedded into the slider, and visible at the tip of the tip of the cross.[1]
:oops:

User avatar
HaaTa
Master Kiibohd Hunter

01 Feb 2015, 20:09

Basically, the doubleshot engraved keys are cheaper to make because you only have to mold one type of keycap, then engrave whatever letters you want into it.

User avatar
Touch_It

01 Feb 2015, 23:37

Wow. I really like the looks of that board. I would love to take it into work to use and see the reactions it got :D>

User avatar
Muirium
µ

02 Feb 2015, 01:10

You're sure these are *clicky* switches? HaaTa's are damn nice linears…

User avatar
seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

02 Feb 2015, 10:02

see next post, thank you guk!
Last edited by seebart on 02 Feb 2015, 10:25, edited 2 times in total.

User avatar
guk
1896 Vintage Reds

02 Feb 2015, 10:09

seebart wrote:
Muirium wrote: You're sure these are *clicky* switches? HaaTa's are damn nice linears…
you tell me...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCjIHxe ... e=youtu.be

I cannot embed videos here I don`t know why!
"qCjIHxeVchw"
I think you might have to make an addition to the wiki regarding those switches. :p

User avatar
Muirium
µ

02 Feb 2015, 14:00

Indeed. Clickety click! I'm guessing these must feel pretty damn good, as the click mechanism sounds nice and sharp, and Fujitsu Leaf Springs are already some of the very best linears out there. You mentioned lube?

What's that in the foreground? Pretty funky pattern for a keyboard case! (I'm guessing it's something you put beside the keyboard to prop the camera on…)

Typing videos remind me that I need more training (especially on a non-QWERTY layout) before I'm confident enough to show my style. Like you, I under-use most my fingers. Gotta improve, damnit!

User avatar
seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

02 Feb 2015, 14:25

they feel nice, short travel and snappy click. And loud for that matter! Yes, this is one case where a lube job is in order, I`m sure of it. I need to research lube variants and see what I need to get. Right again, that pattern belongs to a metal box I used to lean the phone against, ignore it.

User avatar
Muirium
µ

02 Feb 2015, 14:40

Nice. Looking at the layout, it should be quite useable with some creative mod placement. And vitally, given those harebrained vertically stacked arrow keys, the HHKB Fn key is present:

Image

I wonder what to do with all those function keys!

Post Reply

Return to “Keyboards”