Alps Appreciation
- fohat
- Elder Messenger
- Location: Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
- Main keyboard: Model F 122-key terminal
- Main mouse: Microsoft Optical Mouse
- Favorite switch: Model F Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: 0158
I still may not actually get around to doing it for a month, but I got a great Northgate 101 on ebay with like new complicated white Alps, and I am going to upgrade them. I have had soldering problems with Northgates several times in the past, so now, with Mr Bishop's great tool, I want to leave the switch bodies intact and in place and do whatever I am going to do from the top.
What I want to achieve is a light action and quiet but distinctly tactile switch. I have enough good clean orange to do the whole thing, plus tons of others (black, white, cream (old Wang creams, not the dampened Apple type), and a few blues).
My thought now is to use orange, either straight-up or click-modded, and I will take them apart, clean them thoroughly, and lightly lube them before I install them into the new switch bodies. As I understand it, the orange springs are among the lightest available, already, and lubing them should make them seem even lighter.
So I am left with whether to mod the leaves. Tactility is supremely important to me, and noise is more of a minus than a plus, but I will gladly lived with less-than-ideal sound to optimize the feel.
Does this sound like a plan, and/or do you have other suggestions? I have never seriously modded Alps switches before.
What I want to achieve is a light action and quiet but distinctly tactile switch. I have enough good clean orange to do the whole thing, plus tons of others (black, white, cream (old Wang creams, not the dampened Apple type), and a few blues).
My thought now is to use orange, either straight-up or click-modded, and I will take them apart, clean them thoroughly, and lightly lube them before I install them into the new switch bodies. As I understand it, the orange springs are among the lightest available, already, and lubing them should make them seem even lighter.
So I am left with whether to mod the leaves. Tactility is supremely important to me, and noise is more of a minus than a plus, but I will gladly lived with less-than-ideal sound to optimize the feel.
Does this sound like a plan, and/or do you have other suggestions? I have never seriously modded Alps switches before.
- Stabilized
- Location: Edinburgh
- DT Pro Member: -
Thanks for the reply! I thought as much, I will see how it types after a keycap swap as the stock ones are pretty horrendous!scottc wrote: ↑They're pin-compatible so you can desolder the Matias switches and replace them with the orange Alps, but the insides aren't compatible from what I understand. You'd have to do a full switch swap, not just replace the switch tops etc. like you can with plate-mount MX.
That makes a lot of sense, I think I will go to the hassle of swapping them out.emdude wrote: ↑Matias switches, which are based off of Simplified Alps, are different from Alps SKCM/SKCL, as far the housing and the switchplate are concerned at least. I think you would be better off just swapping the switches in their entirety.
I don't have a suggestion, but I would just like the add that I am interested in your eventual experience as I would like something similar from my Matias keyboard.fohat wrote: ↑What I want to achieve is a light action and quiet but distinctly tactile switch. I have enough good clean orange to do the whole thing, plus tons of others (black, white, cream (old Wang creams, not the dampened Apple type), and a few blues).
My thought now is to use orange, either straight-up or click-modded, and I will take them apart, clean them thoroughly, and lightly lube them before I install them into the new switch bodies. As I understand it, the orange springs are among the lightest available, already, and lubing them should make them seem even lighter.
Does this sound like a plan, and/or do you have other suggestions? I have never seriously modded Alps switches before.
Unfortunately though I think my orange Alps are quite worn as they bind quite a bit from off centre key presses. Would lubing and cleaning remove that, or would I be better off finding another donor board?
- fohat
- Elder Messenger
- Location: Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
- Main keyboard: Model F 122-key terminal
- Main mouse: Microsoft Optical Mouse
- Favorite switch: Model F Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: 0158
Nothing will replace material that has eroded away. Late-1980s-early-1990s Apple keyboards are not so hard to find or expensive.Stabilized wrote: ↑
Unfortunately though I think my orange Alps are quite worn as they bind quite a bit from off centre key presses. Would lubing and cleaning remove that, or would I be better off finding another donor board?
- Stabilized
- Location: Edinburgh
- DT Pro Member: -
That's a shame, thanks for the info! I will have to keep an eye out for a less used one.
Unfortunately, they aren't as common here in the UK as they are in the US.
Unfortunately, they aren't as common here in the UK as they are in the US.
- alh84001
- v.001
- Location: EU-HR-ZG
- Main keyboard: unsaver
- Main mouse: logitech m305 / apple trackpad
- Favorite switch: BS
- DT Pro Member: -
You can always try, as you got nothing to loose but a bit of time. I had SKCMs white in a really bad condition, binding and all, and after cleaning them (blowing air with an air compressor, cleaning switch housing with isopropanol) and lubing they are quite nice now. I can't compare them to stock white, though. Also, I think that even without lubing they would improve a great deal. YMMV of course.
And as a tip, you don't need to clean them all. First I cleaned some 30 switches, put them in alpha slots in the plate, and put their keycaps on. Just trying them that way I knew they were much better than before.
And as a tip, you don't need to clean them all. First I cleaned some 30 switches, put them in alpha slots in the plate, and put their keycaps on. Just trying them that way I knew they were much better than before.
- Stabilized
- Location: Edinburgh
- DT Pro Member: -
That's also really good to know, thanks!
I will give it a shot as I don't plan to use the AEK for anything else, especially as the keycaps are already going on my Matias.
I will give it a shot as I don't plan to use the AEK for anything else, especially as the keycaps are already going on my Matias.
- E3E
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: Blue, Neon Green, Striped Amber, Cream Alps, Topre
- Main mouse: Logitech, Topre
- Favorite switch: Alps, Topre
- DT Pro Member: -
For the lightest springs, you could go for Alps SKCL Green, though I think Matias Linears are even lighter, but I'm not sure as I'm not very familiar with Matias.fohat wrote: ↑I still may not actually get around to doing it for a month, but I got a great Northgate 101 on ebay with like new complicated white Alps, and I am going to upgrade them. I have had soldering problems with Northgates several times in the past, so now, with Mr Bishop's great tool, I want to leave the switch bodies intact and in place and do whatever I am going to do from the top.
What I want to achieve is a light action and quiet but distinctly tactile switch. I have enough good clean orange to do the whole thing, plus tons of others (black, white, cream (old Wang creams, not the dampened Apple type), and a few blues).
My thought now is to use orange, either straight-up or click-modded, and I will take them apart, clean them thoroughly, and lightly lube them before I install them into the new switch bodies. As I understand it, the orange springs are among the lightest available, already, and lubing them should make them seem even lighter.
So I am left with whether to mod the leaves. Tactility is supremely important to me, and noise is more of a minus than a plus, but I will gladly lived with less-than-ideal sound to optimize the feel.
Does this sound like a plan, and/or do you have other suggestions? I have never seriously modded Alps switches before.
If you're wanting to click mod orange leaves for feel alone, then perhaps you could just generously lube the leaves, as that will more than likely silence them.
When I was cleaning my Acer KB101A during the restoration process, I used isopropyl alcohol on the plate to remove the grit. Apparently some of it seeped into the switches and muted them until it evaporated. I almost freaked out until I realized it was temporary.
Good luck on modding that Northgate.
Oh, and the only issue with switch top swapping as opposed to desoldering that I see is that the shorter plates affect feel in a very marginal way. When swapping SKCM Blue internals into a Salmon housing, it felt a wee bit stiffer.
It could just be me though, so take that with a grain of salt. It doesn't SEEM like it'd make such a difference, but it might!
The fact tiny tabs on the top housing make a huge difference in feel is a good example of something seemingly tiny affecting switch feel.
- fohat
- Elder Messenger
- Location: Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
- Main keyboard: Model F 122-key terminal
- Main mouse: Microsoft Optical Mouse
- Favorite switch: Model F Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: 0158
I am probably looking at putting orange internals into white bodies of approximately the same vintage.E3E wrote: ↑
Oh, and the only issue with switch top swapping as opposed to desoldering that I see is that the shorter plates affect feel in a very marginal way. When swapping SKCM Blue internals into a Salmon housing, it felt a wee bit stiffer.
The fact tiny tabs on the top housing make a huge difference in feel is a good example of something seemingly tiny affecting switch feel.
I have not looked but I am hoping that the corresponding parts are the same size.
-
- Location: Boston
- Main keyboard: Realforce Silent 55g
- Favorite switch: Blue alps
- DT Pro Member: -
Today truly proved how bad vast my keyboard collection is. I opened a drawer to get my old car radio, and lone behold was greeted by an orange aek and a leading edge 2214 with early whites that feel like my blues.
Explains the set of aek keycaps I have lying around, but sadly I don't know where the crazy thick double shot keycaps I have for the 2214 are. Gotta love finding unfinished projects laying around
Explains the set of aek keycaps I have lying around, but sadly I don't know where the crazy thick double shot keycaps I have for the 2214 are. Gotta love finding unfinished projects laying around
- drevyek
- Location: US-CA
- Main keyboard: Leopold FC980C
- Main mouse: Kensington Slimblade
- Favorite switch: Alps Orange
- DT Pro Member: -
Does anyone have a 6311? I just got one (Data General), but I really don't like the switches (really rough/sharp typing on the keys not on the home row). I just took it apart to have a better look at the switches and plate, to try to use it on a Alps64. The slots are too narrow to accept alps switches (about 1~2 mm too thin) and I don't trust myself to file each slot perfectly enough.
The mods have a really strange stabilizer setup, with the wires clicked into the key itself, as opposed to the plate. The plate, additionally, has fully integrated slots (not removable). This makes it pretty hard to use the mods on any other board, and which would require me to get the mods from another board (which I'd like to avoid.
Does anyone have a work-around? And, if not, are they other caps that have the same profile? I know that the Apple caps aren't the same profile (I tried to put it on the M0116).
edit: Or, I suppose, any help on making these Acer switches less rough?
Spoiler:
Spoiler:
edit: Or, I suppose, any help on making these Acer switches less rough?
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- emdude
- Model M Apologist
- DT Pro Member: 0160
That 6311 uses Acer switches, which seem to be completely different from actual Alps switches other than the use of the Alps-mount and folded tactile leaves.
I am looking at the wiki page now, and I did not know that they were mounted exposed over a membrane instead of being completely discrete switches with switchplates!
Using Acer switches with an Alps64 is definitely a no-go here.
I am looking at the wiki page now, and I did not know that they were mounted exposed over a membrane instead of being completely discrete switches with switchplates!
Using Acer switches with an Alps64 is definitely a no-go here.
- seebart
- Offtopicthority Instigator
- Location: Germany
- Main keyboard: Rotation
- Main mouse: Steelseries Sensei
- Favorite switch: IBM capacitive buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: 0061
- Contact:
You need to add a link to your thread chiptea so everyone can see that beautiful Focus FK-2001 of yours.
- chiptea
- Location: Vancouver, BC
- Main keyboard: AT101
- Main mouse: g402
- Favorite switch: Topre/Alps Rainbow
- DT Pro Member: -
Ooh, good thinking.seebart wrote: ↑You need to add a link to your thread chiptea so everyone can see that beautiful Focus FK-2001 of yours.
photos-f62/new-old-stock-focus-fk-2001- ... ml#p321267
- drevyek
- Location: US-CA
- Main keyboard: Leopold FC980C
- Main mouse: Kensington Slimblade
- Favorite switch: Alps Orange
- DT Pro Member: -
I have no intention of using the acer switches on a Alps64- the exact opposite. I want to use clicky-modded creams, but I want to use the caps from the 6311. But, my issue is that the modifiers use an upside-down stabilizer system.emdude wrote: ↑That 6311 uses Acer switches, which seem to be completely different from actual Alps switches other than the use of the Alps-mount and folded tactile leaves.
I am looking at the wiki page now, and I did not know that they were mounted exposed over a membrane instead of being completely discrete switches with switchplates!
Using Acer switches with an Alps64 is definitely a no-go here.
The switches are sorta cool- they use an actual tactile leaf, which feels good individually, but there is friction and some level of sharpness that I can't really describe well that just kills the experience when typing. I would say that the wiki should have a much more damning review than "negative". The membrane feel is just on bottoming out, where it feels almost cushioned. The return (up-click) is even worse than the downstroke.
- ohaimark
- Kingpin
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: Siemens G80 Lookalike
- Main mouse: Logitech G502
- Favorite switch: Blue Alps
- DT Pro Member: 1337
There isn't a good way to use the stabilized caps on a regular Alps board. No mods have been documented either.
I don't think it's worth the effort, personally. I saved the alpha keys and used different stabilized Alps caps to fill out the remainder.
I don't think it's worth the effort, personally. I saved the alpha keys and used different stabilized Alps caps to fill out the remainder.
- drevyek
- Location: US-CA
- Main keyboard: Leopold FC980C
- Main mouse: Kensington Slimblade
- Favorite switch: Alps Orange
- DT Pro Member: -
Thanks- I was afraid of that. A mod wouldn't be too difficult though- basically grafting the slots onto the normal clips with some plastic glue/cement. But not worth it, I'll agree.ohaimark wrote: ↑There isn't a good way to use the stabilized caps on a regular Alps board. No mods have been documented either.
I don't think it's worth the effort, personally. I saved the alpha keys and used different stabilized Alps caps to fill out the remainder.
Which caps did you use to replace the mods, if you don't mind me asking? I want to stick with winkeyless, but don't really know of any easily obtainable WKL sets, outside Matias. I'd rather not have to buy a whole keyboard for some modifiers.
- Blaise170
- ALPS キーボード
- Location: Boston, MA
- Main keyboard: Cooler Master Quickfire Stealth
- Main mouse: Logitech G502
- Favorite switch: Alps SKCM Blue
- DT Pro Member: 0129
- Contact:
I have a ton of Alps keysets now too. Indeed Acer feels good individually (amazing without the membrane in fact) but the membrane makes them one of the worst.
- drevyek
- Location: US-CA
- Main keyboard: Leopold FC980C
- Main mouse: Kensington Slimblade
- Favorite switch: Alps Orange
- DT Pro Member: -
if you look inside the switch, the leaf looks a lot like the brown's leaf. No wonder the click is so well defined. The membrane at the end is just very unfortunate. The M gets away with it because its hammer contacts so cleanly, but the Acer switch has a gooey follow through.
My issue is with the roughness of the switches- they feel like the sliders are getting stuck on the switch itself. I assume that's a lube problem, though.
My issue is with the roughness of the switches- they feel like the sliders are getting stuck on the switch itself. I assume that's a lube problem, though.
- mike52787
- Alps Aficionado
- Location: South-West Florida
- Main keyboard: G80-5000HAAUS
- Main mouse: Zowie EC1-A
- Favorite switch: Vintage MX Black
- DT Pro Member: 0166
So, time for a 2nd opinion. I have asked around on gh about the correct lube to use on blue alps (they were filthy, and In washing them, all the original lube came off. ) I have heard good things about Dupont Teflon Silicone lubricant, but its somewhat expensive, so I want to make sure its the right tool for the job.
- Chyros
- Location: The Netherlands
- Main keyboard: whatever I'm reviewing next :p
- Main mouse: a cheap Logitech
- Favorite switch: Alps SKCM Blue
- DT Pro Member: -
No-one has found a lube that really "works" on Alps switches yet. I don't think anyone can give you a guarantee here :/ .mike52787 wrote: ↑So, time for a 2nd opinion. I have asked around on gh about the correct lube to use on blue alps (they were filthy, and In washing them, all the original lube came off. ) I have heard good things about Dupont Teflon Silicone lubricant, but its somewhat expensive, so I want to make sure its the right tool for the job.
- mike52787
- Alps Aficionado
- Location: South-West Florida
- Main keyboard: G80-5000HAAUS
- Main mouse: Zowie EC1-A
- Favorite switch: Vintage MX Black
- DT Pro Member: 0166
Well, Ill give that Dupont lube a shot. If it works well, Ill probably re-lube my click modded greens. My 2nd blue alps board from taobao is finally moving as well, after being stuck in china for forever. If its anywhere near as dirty as my first one, Itll need washed and lubed as well.Chyros wrote:No-one has found a lube that really "works" on Alps switches yet. I don't think anyone can give you a guarantee here :/ .mike52787 wrote: ↑So, time for a 2nd opinion. I have asked around on gh about the correct lube to use on blue alps (they were filthy, and In washing them, all the original lube came off. ) I have heard good things about Dupont Teflon Silicone lubricant, but its somewhat expensive, so I want to make sure its the right tool for the job.
- drevyek
- Location: US-CA
- Main keyboard: Leopold FC980C
- Main mouse: Kensington Slimblade
- Favorite switch: Alps Orange
- DT Pro Member: -
Keep us posted on it- A good lube would save a bunch of boards (including this 6311).mike52787 wrote: ↑ Well, Ill give that Dupont lube a shot. If it works well, Ill probably re-lube my click modded greens. My 2nd blue alps board from taobao is finally moving as well, after being stuck in china for forever. If its anywhere near as dirty as my first one, Itll need washed and lubed as well.
- Wingpad
- Location: Illinois, USA
- Main keyboard: Industrialized Model M/Orange ALPS Dell AT101W
- Main mouse: Logitech G502-RGB
- Favorite switch: Capacitive Buckling Springs
- DT Pro Member: 0162
- Contact:
My experience with the Dupont lube is that, initially, it dampens the click a little and makes the switch "mushy" but after actuating it for a bit it returns to being smooth and pretty closely imitates the original lubing. I am more concerned about the lube's long term effects on the switches, though. I think what I really need to do is just put together a board with the blue alps we recovered and use it for a bit so I can have more informed results. The problem is that I don't have a board I am willing to subject to that experiment... I guess I could just pick up another AT101W from somewhere and increase it's value by an order of magnitudemike52787 wrote: ↑So, time for a 2nd opinion. I have asked around on gh about the correct lube to use on blue alps (they were filthy, and In washing them, all the original lube came off. ) I have heard good things about Dupont Teflon Silicone lubricant, but its somewhat expensive, so I want to make sure its the right tool for the job.
- fohat
- Elder Messenger
- Location: Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
- Main keyboard: Model F 122-key terminal
- Main mouse: Microsoft Optical Mouse
- Favorite switch: Model F Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: 0158
Built my "silent" AT101W today with Matias Quiet Clicks for the most-used keys (I had about 65 of them) and pine creams (non-dampened) for the balance, except for pine whites for a few keys where I wanted to be notified with a click (Escape, Num Lock, Caps Lock, etc).
Damn you, Tai Ho, for not making the proper space bar and Caps Lock!
Damn you, Tai Ho, for not making the proper space bar and Caps Lock!
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- Chyros
- Location: The Netherlands
- Main keyboard: whatever I'm reviewing next :p
- Main mouse: a cheap Logitech
- Favorite switch: Alps SKCM Blue
- DT Pro Member: -
FUCK. That looks sleek as SHIT. I'm not normally too much into the whole keycap thing, but that's one of the most elegant keyboards I've ever seen.
You, sir, have good taste.
You, sir, have good taste.