My first Cherry switch keyboard was my Shiny stainless steel custom 60% with MX greens. I'd tried every member of the modern MX family as loose switches before then, but that was my first full board. Not too impressed! I mean, I'd gotten used to my IBM Model F XT already, and though the SA caps I put on my 60% were cool, the switches weren't up to much.Parjánya wrote: ↑So far I've tested MX browns, reds, blacks, and blues, and they felt all boring to me, except the blues, which have a good clicky sound but no respectable weight. I'll try MX greens next, or the white ones... but I'm starting to lose my hopes on Cherry switches :'(
Pretty much been the same story with every MX based keyboard I've come by. From modern MX red Ducky to vintage G80-3422. I'd already found better switch feel elsewhere. And there's no way to mod IBM-style gorgeous click into the MX family. You're just fiddling around with details, not the fundamentals.
Zslane ought to try a NovaTouch sometime. I know his excuse not to (fullsize fundamentalist). But the truth is he'd get his beloved SA caps on a much better switch than anything in the MX line. Fancy caps on mediocre (at best!) switches don't cut it, for me. Those same caps sing a different song when you put them somewhere nice.
But we wander off-topic, as always. This thread's really about the Cherry keyboard experience. Not the modern users of their switches. I'm not caught up in the old Cherry magic, but I'm more open to the idea there's something to it than the nonsense of never-ending mods on their modern, shitty switches.
@Photekq: Aye, I'm up for it. The danger, though, is there's always a chance I'm not impressed with it. If there's any Cherry board I could go head over heels for it's their one and only TKL. But when dealing with an IBM and Topre snob, don't count on it!