Maybe here:
Stuff you just bought
- JP!
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: Currently a Model M
- Main mouse: Steel Series Sensei
- Favorite switch: Beam Spring
- DT Pro Member: 0194
- Contact:
- Menuhin
- Location: Germany
- Main keyboard: HHKB PD-KB400BN lubed, has Hasu Bt Controller
- Main mouse: How to make scroll ring of Expert Mouse smoother?
- Favorite switch: Gateron ink lubed
- DT Pro Member: -
An interesting company, focusing on developing "Font Types".
MORISAWA might have made used of that keyboard indeed - or is that Kanji-system namded MK-11- MORISAWA indeed?
MORISAWA might have made used of that keyboard indeed - or is that Kanji-system namded MK-11- MORISAWA indeed?
- JP!
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: Currently a Model M
- Main mouse: Steel Series Sensei
- Favorite switch: Beam Spring
- DT Pro Member: 0194
- Contact:
They made a number of photo typesetting systems such as the MK-110 as seen in the video clip.
https://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E3%83%A2 ... 5%E3%83%AF
A pic of their MK-300 system.
Spoiler:
- Obscure
- Location: Austria
- Main keyboard: IBM XT83 at the office, AEK at home
- Main mouse: old logitech model Nr. rubbed off
- Favorite switch: capacitive buckling springs
- Contact:
I got a Cherry G80-3000HFD from the chunk box, serial 043893 - is it 1993?
It is my first MX-blue board. As I have some clones, razer green and outemu blue, this is really different from what I expected.
The keyfeel and sound is completely different and rather reminds me on the ALPS SKCM orange or white dampend of my AEKs than those of the MX-blue clones.
The only thing is the spring rattling around in the switch after a keypress which I really hate about this construction. But on this board it is quite sympathetic. I must think of a diligent squirrel rattling around with nuts while I'm typing. The keys are hardly clicky at all and tactility is very light. Some keys are clicky (about 5%) but most are not. So it is not 100% homogeneous all over the board, on some switches I cannot tell hardly any difference to the ALPS??? But the inconsistency over the board is not disturbing me when writing. I can type really fast on this board. Switches are light and smooth you have to take care, if you do not want to bottom out. I do not press keys erratically as I do on other light boards???. Many keys make double or tripple trigger when pressing, I hope it will disappear with some use.This one could become one of my favourites, it feels really good overall - wow - never say never... I really have to check a modern MX-blue board some day for comparison.
It is my first MX-blue board. As I have some clones, razer green and outemu blue, this is really different from what I expected.
The keyfeel and sound is completely different and rather reminds me on the ALPS SKCM orange or white dampend of my AEKs than those of the MX-blue clones.
The only thing is the spring rattling around in the switch after a keypress which I really hate about this construction. But on this board it is quite sympathetic. I must think of a diligent squirrel rattling around with nuts while I'm typing. The keys are hardly clicky at all and tactility is very light. Some keys are clicky (about 5%) but most are not. So it is not 100% homogeneous all over the board, on some switches I cannot tell hardly any difference to the ALPS??? But the inconsistency over the board is not disturbing me when writing. I can type really fast on this board. Switches are light and smooth you have to take care, if you do not want to bottom out. I do not press keys erratically as I do on other light boards???. Many keys make double or tripple trigger when pressing, I hope it will disappear with some use.This one could become one of my favourites, it feels really good overall - wow - never say never... I really have to check a modern MX-blue board some day for comparison.
-
- Location: America
- Main keyboard: It varies.
- Main mouse: MX Ergo
- Favorite switch: VINTAGE SHIT
- DT Pro Member: -
Can I see a photo of the back label? That's the main way to tell the date.Obscure wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 01:14I got a Cherry G80-3000HFD from the chunk box, serial 043893 - is it 1993?
It is my first MX-blue board. As I have some clones, razer green and outemu blue, this is really different from what I expected.
The keyfeel and sound is completely different and rather reminds me on the ALPS SKCM orange or white dampend of my AEKs than those of the MX-blue clones.
The only thing is the spring rattling around in the switch after a keypress which I really hate about this construction. But on this board it is quite sympathetic. I must think of a diligent squirrel rattling around with nuts while I'm typing. The keys are hardly clicky at all and tactility is very light. Some keys are clicky (about 5%) but most are not. So it is not 100% homogeneous all over the board, on some switches I cannot tell hardly any difference to the ALPS??? But the inconsistency over the board is not disturbing me when writing. I can type really fast on this board. Switches are light and smooth you have to take care, if you do not want to bottom out. I do not press keys erratically as I do on other light boards???. Many keys make double or tripple trigger when pressing, I hope it will disappear with some use.This one could become one of my favourites, it feels really good overall - wow - never say never... I really have to check a modern MX-blue board some day for comparison.
- kbdfr
- The Tiproman
- Location: Berlin, Germany
- Main keyboard: Tipro MID-QM-128A + two Tipro matrix modules
- Main mouse: Contour Rollermouse Pro
- Favorite switch: Cherry black
- DT Pro Member: 0010
-
- Location: Madison, WI, USA
- Main keyboard: Tecware Phantom 87 | Affirmative 1225T
- Main mouse: Rosewill M62 NEON | Microsoft Intellimouse Pro
- Favorite switch: IBM beamsprings
- DT Pro Member: -
Just picked up my first Alps board - a black Dell AT101W.
- Redmaus
- Gotta start somewhere
- Location: Near Dallas, Texas
- Main keyboard: Unsaver | 3276 | Kingsaver
- Main mouse: Kensington Slimblade
- Favorite switch: Capacitative Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
Nice! I had one of those that was my daily driver for awhile, albeit a long time ago. Black alps isn't too shabby honestly, although I prefer orange.brainandforce wrote: ↑03 Jul 2019, 17:59Just picked up my first Alps board - a black Dell AT101W.
Spoiler:
- Obscure
- Location: Austria
- Main keyboard: IBM XT83 at the office, AEK at home
- Main mouse: old logitech model Nr. rubbed off
- Favorite switch: capacitive buckling springs
- Contact:
043893 F02 - yes 1993 - thank you.
- Laser
- emacs -nw
- Location: Romania
- Main keyboard: Plum TKL \w Topre domes (work) / Novatouch (home)
- DT Pro Member: 0180
I bought a 3d printer ("Ender 3X", 200$ shipping included, from a warehouse in Europe no less!). Since then, and because I have the keyboards I want (Topre etc.), I rarely visit here 3d printing finally became cheap and good, and opens nearly-infinite possibilities (imagine making your own cases, plates and custom Alps stabilizers ...).
- abrahamstechnology
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: Laser with SMK Cherry mount
- Main mouse: Mitsumi ECM-S3902
- Favorite switch: Alps and Alps clones
- DT Pro Member: 0212
SMK switches
- purdobol
- Location: Poland
- Main keyboard: Custom
- Main mouse: MS WMO 1.1A
- Favorite switch: Marquardt Butterfly
- DT Pro Member: -
All of this:
Just to get these little buggers:
Such a waste of human resource. Packing it and transport. Why do people are so afraid to take the damn caps off
Still very happy the hunt is finally over. Well left shift is missing but whatever. Yay!
Just to get these little buggers:
Such a waste of human resource. Packing it and transport. Why do people are so afraid to take the damn caps off
Still very happy the hunt is finally over. Well left shift is missing but whatever. Yay!
- zrrion
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: F122
- Main mouse: Microsoft IntelliMouse
- Favorite switch: ALPS SKCC Cream
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
First beamspring! Very excited about this old gal.
- snacksthecat
- ✶✶✶✶
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: SSK
- Main mouse: BenQ ZOWIE EC1-A
- DT Pro Member: 0205
- Contact:
- Redmaus
- Gotta start somewhere
- Location: Near Dallas, Texas
- Main keyboard: Unsaver | 3276 | Kingsaver
- Main mouse: Kensington Slimblade
- Favorite switch: Capacitative Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
- dcopellino
- Location: Italia - Napoli
- Main keyboard: IBM 4704 F400 brushed chrome
- Main mouse: Logitech laser wired
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: 0229
- Contact:
Congs with you.... On eBay yesterday an Italian layout one was sold for nearly a 1k... I am torn... On the one hand I've acquittance
og Tactility clickyness of its keycapses, but on the other hand its design is so C64 like, a brick on the desk, piratically...
og Tactility clickyness of its keycapses, but on the other hand its design is so C64 like, a brick on the desk, piratically...
- dcopellino
- Location: Italia - Napoli
- Main keyboard: IBM 4704 F400 brushed chrome
- Main mouse: Logitech laser wired
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: 0229
- Contact:
....So said the fox to the grape...
-
- Location: Des Moines / Cedar Falls, IA, USA
- Main keyboard: IBM Model F107
- DT Pro Member: 0190
I presume you're doing a mix of these caps with some Maquardt butterfly switches perhaps from another Olympia keyboard? So say white alphas with black modifiers? That's something I always thought would look nice!
- snacksthecat
- ✶✶✶✶
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: SSK
- Main mouse: BenQ ZOWIE EC1-A
- DT Pro Member: 0205
- Contact:
Decided it was time for a new PC and opted for the tiny route this time.
La croix can for scale but you really gotta see it in person to appreciate how small it is.
La croix can for scale but you really gotta see it in person to appreciate how small it is.
- Mattelec
- Location: Spain
- Main keyboard: IDB60
- DT Pro Member: -
- snacksthecat
- ✶✶✶✶
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: SSK
- Main mouse: BenQ ZOWIE EC1-A
- DT Pro Member: 0205
- Contact:
Trying to get a bit more organized. I have a few things to ship out and thought my new white board would be the perfect vehicle to plan out my work.
From left to right the boxes mean:
From left to right the boxes mean:
- Find it
- Prepare it
- Pack it
- Label it
- //gainsborough
- ALPSの日常
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: some kind of alps keyboard
- Favorite switch: clk: SKCM blue, lin: SKCL cream, tac: SKCM cream
- DT Pro Member: 0188
Hahahaha - I love it.
- dcopellino
- Location: Italia - Napoli
- Main keyboard: IBM 4704 F400 brushed chrome
- Main mouse: Logitech laser wired
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: 0229
- Contact:
I'be just bought these new pair of flip flop on holiday here at Chania, Crete.... I was in full abstinence crisis from compulsive purchases, so my tarnished sight fell upon what seemed most close to a keyboard in an holiday place.... they are not the best, I know it, but anyway different from the usual sandals already seen on DT...... Very tactile, though.
Good use of Talenti jars!snacksthecat wrote: ↑17 Aug 2019, 02:42Trying to get a bit more organized. I have a few things to ship out and thought my new white board would be the perfect vehicle to plan out my work.
From left to right the boxes mean:We run a pretty tight ship here at Snacks Cat Industries.
- Find it
- Prepare it
- Pack it
- Label it
Someone needs to send a pair to Linus, stat! Very cool. Do they make a nice clickety clack when you walk?dcopellino wrote: ↑25 Aug 2019, 00:26IMG_20190825_010741.jpg
I'be just bought these new pair of flip flop on holiday here at Chania, Crete.... I was in full abstinence crisis from compulsive purchases, so my tarnished sight fell upon what seemed most close to a keyboard in an holiday place.... they are not the best, I know it, but anyway different from the usual sandals already seen on DT...... Very tactile, though.
- PlacaFromHell
- Location: Argentina
- Main keyboard: IBM 3101
- Main mouse: Optical piece of shit
- Favorite switch: Beamspring
- DT Pro Member: -
-
- Location: Stockholm, Sweden
- DT Pro Member: 0011
I have almost got addicted to watching The Lock Picking Lawyer on Youtube, on which he picks various locks in seconds and shows how very badly made many locks are. There are a bunch of gun locks there. I would check that the trigger lock you are using is not one of the bad ones...
BTW, in my country it is also the law to store guns in a gun safe.