new big skcm blue alps
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hi,
So my spring came and it seems to work with the top housing on the desk. Slight problem is that the lower housing part nub is a bit too big. So I will need to make a new one with a smaller nub. Regardless It's coming along!
Comparison of the template for the leaf spring/switch plate metal part. I will get the square punch to make the inside cutout nicer. Fit of the old leafspring piece on the switch plate. Bit too big. Better fit of the new one.
All the switch pieces with the 1st and 2nd gen style click leafs. Top of the switch with the spring inside
and the sad doh moment of seeing that I forgot to make a bottom part with a smaller nub to sized for the new spring
So my spring came and it seems to work with the top housing on the desk. Slight problem is that the lower housing part nub is a bit too big. So I will need to make a new one with a smaller nub. Regardless It's coming along!
Comparison of the template for the leaf spring/switch plate metal part. I will get the square punch to make the inside cutout nicer. Fit of the old leafspring piece on the switch plate. Bit too big. Better fit of the new one.
All the switch pieces with the 1st and 2nd gen style click leafs. Top of the switch with the spring inside
and the sad doh moment of seeing that I forgot to make a bottom part with a smaller nub to sized for the new spring
- PlacaFromHell
- Location: Argentina
- Main keyboard: IBM 3101
- Main mouse: Optical piece of shit
- Favorite switch: Beamspring
- DT Pro Member: -
Would you consider it's easier to work with a bigger switch than a real-sized one? Loooks good for prototyping.
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hi it's definitely easier to make a bigger switch than a smaller one. Much easier to hand cut metal etc. Its good for prototyping but there is one consideration.PlacaFromHell wrote: ↑02 Jun 2020, 01:16Would you consider it's easier to work with a bigger switch than a real-sized one? Loooks good for prototyping.
There is a minor thing to keep in mind. The variances are scaled up with the switch. I can adjust the sizes of various parts by quite a bit of ranges.
I have huge leeway with things like the return spring. But I've found for the alps click leaf that even the slightest of changes bend wise make the click disappear.
So if you are making a big click leaf. It's great. But if you are scaling down your big click leaf design suddenly your slight error makes it not click. It can be harder to adjust those smaller pieces.
The main thing is that scaling the switch down might not necessarily be as easy as reducing every measurement by 4x.
Some materials like thin metals might not scale correctly requiring changes. For instance in my alps switch the switch plate metals are 1.3mm thick. Which is 4x scaled up.
Imagine if the skcm blue alps never existed and I was prototyping a new click switch in this thread. I might not think 1.3mm metal was required. That 1.3mm metal is me scaling up the switch plate .3mm to .4mm metal of the small one to the big size. If I was independently making a new switch I might use .6mm thick metal. Why not? For my big switch that is sufficient. Scaling that .6mm down though would make it be too thin for a small scale switch.
For very complicated switches this could be a slight issue.
It's not the biggest problem though, just a consideration to keep in mind.
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Here is what I mean. Again, this is not a major issue at all but if your switch is complicated it could add some minor headaches later if you design the big one first.
This skcm blue has its contact switch plate thickness here. And this novel keys big switch has a comparable thickness contact.
If you independently designed the big switch then scaled it down the metal contact would be too thin.
Also some metals might stop bending/deforming in the correct way at different scales. They might just crease and fold if directly scaled down. Or not bend or snap if scaled up.
Just something I noticed.
This skcm blue has its contact switch plate thickness here. And this novel keys big switch has a comparable thickness contact.
If you independently designed the big switch then scaled it down the metal contact would be too thin.
Also some metals might stop bending/deforming in the correct way at different scales. They might just crease and fold if directly scaled down. Or not bend or snap if scaled up.
Just something I noticed.
- Attachments
-
- IMG_20200601_202929.jpg (3.43 MiB) Viewed 9388 times
-
- IMG_20200601_202947.jpg (3.16 MiB) Viewed 9388 times
- PlacaFromHell
- Location: Argentina
- Main keyboard: IBM 3101
- Main mouse: Optical piece of shit
- Favorite switch: Beamspring
- DT Pro Member: -
Nice. Thanks dude, anyways my switch lacks of a mechanical simulated click, I just want to be able to guess a force curve. I may use some wood.
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
HI,
Hopefully have the printed new bottom part with the correct nub for spring soon.
For now I've started to model the switch in fusion360. Here are the STL files for the stem and top housing so far.
I was using a random stem model I found before, but now I have made my own. Which is great.
The upper housing is missing the chamfering, but otherwise they are much more accurate than the previous ones. Must figure out how to share parametric models.
kralcifer has been a great help with parametric modelling and fusion360. It has been great learning how to make parametric models. The ones I have are pretty inefficient, but the abilities the system unlocks are great.
https://grabcad.com/library/skcm-stem-and-top-housing-1
Hopefully have the printed new bottom part with the correct nub for spring soon.
For now I've started to model the switch in fusion360. Here are the STL files for the stem and top housing so far.
I was using a random stem model I found before, but now I have made my own. Which is great.
The upper housing is missing the chamfering, but otherwise they are much more accurate than the previous ones. Must figure out how to share parametric models.
kralcifer has been a great help with parametric modelling and fusion360. It has been great learning how to make parametric models. The ones I have are pretty inefficient, but the abilities the system unlocks are great.
https://grabcad.com/library/skcm-stem-and-top-housing-1
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hi,
So I was able to have the new lower housing part printed. The spring that I got now fits.
Can't remember if I mentioned this was the spring I got
https://www.primeline.net/sp-9705-compr ... ring-steel
Its a bit heavy, but will work for now. The tape on the 3d printing bed came up with the print. A curious colour and a sign of things to come. So lets assemble it It fits and works! Of course almost immediately a corner tab broke I reused the shipping foam from the professional bigswitch to hold it
So prototype number 1 is complete!
What is next
Redo the lower housing in the fusion360
Redoing the switch plate in fusion360
Deciding how to do the electrical connection part. I may get the 2 switch plate pieces water jet cut from steel, unsure.
Testing if the various thicknesses of steel can handle the deformation/metal leaf piece
Get the square cutter I ordered to make the leafspring nicer.
Reliably generate the bump in the leafspring that presses the switch plate
Reduce upstroke click
So I was able to have the new lower housing part printed. The spring that I got now fits.
Can't remember if I mentioned this was the spring I got
https://www.primeline.net/sp-9705-compr ... ring-steel
Its a bit heavy, but will work for now. The tape on the 3d printing bed came up with the print. A curious colour and a sign of things to come. So lets assemble it It fits and works! Of course almost immediately a corner tab broke I reused the shipping foam from the professional bigswitch to hold it
So prototype number 1 is complete!
What is next
Redo the lower housing in the fusion360
Redoing the switch plate in fusion360
Deciding how to do the electrical connection part. I may get the 2 switch plate pieces water jet cut from steel, unsure.
Testing if the various thicknesses of steel can handle the deformation/metal leaf piece
Get the square cutter I ordered to make the leafspring nicer.
Reliably generate the bump in the leafspring that presses the switch plate
Reduce upstroke click
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
I have black and blue resins now and will attempt to print this in the proper colour.
As well I decided to get a custom face mask. Thought I would share. I used Daniel Beardsmore SVG alps file from the wiki and coloured it blue. Then I made the slider into a bit of a smile. Will arrive next week. Mask preview image:
As well I decided to get a custom face mask. Thought I would share. I used Daniel Beardsmore SVG alps file from the wiki and coloured it blue. Then I made the slider into a bit of a smile. Will arrive next week. Mask preview image:
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hi,SneakyRobb wrote: ↑01 Aug 2020, 19:08I have black and blue resins now and will attempt to print this in the proper colour.
As well I decided to get a custom face mask. Thought I would share. I used Daniel Beardsmore SVG alps file from the wiki and coloured it blue. Then I made the slider into a bit of a smile. Will arrive next week. Mask preview image:
mask yes.JPG
Will continue this project after beamspring project but... I did get the mask. It is exactly as silly as you might think.
*The keen might notice the top housing for the skcm blue alps says "ALPS." which is not necessarily correct. Also, I used Daniel beardsmore's switch recognition model uploaded to DT wiki so I must acknowledge that.
Anyway, enjoy the rediculousness
-
- Location: Spain
- Main keyboard: Ibm model m
- Main mouse: Mx master 1
- Favorite switch: buckling springs
any idea of what are you using the giant switch for yet?
I suggest a couple things:
-make it into a giant enter key (like those usb fluffy things you pound to hit enter) so you can hammer it down to send emails and stuff.
-go big or go home and make the world's biggest keyboard, full layout XD
I suggest a couple things:
-make it into a giant enter key (like those usb fluffy things you pound to hit enter) so you can hammer it down to send emails and stuff.
-go big or go home and make the world's biggest keyboard, full layout XD
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hi,M9HM wrote: ↑18 Sep 2020, 12:17any idea of what are you using the giant switch for yet?
I suggest a couple things:
-make it into a giant enter key (like those usb fluffy things you pound to hit enter) so you can hammer it down to send emails and stuff.
-go big or go home and make the world's biggest keyboard, full layout XD
Conceptually I made this switch for trouble shooting , testing switch concepts and inspiring. Making my own switches. A 4x scale is great. You can cut metal to fit. You can see better and touch. Whether it's a cherry MX, scale beamspring or alps switch. 4x scale allows more hands on thoughts.
I think there was actually a 4x scale keyboard. I think if you watch chyros review of the novelkeys 4x they show a 4x scale razor board.
Regardless the "point" of this project is perhaps novelty but more than that to inspire. I want to finish beamsprings first but this will be right after that
-
- Location: Spain
- Main keyboard: Ibm model m
- Main mouse: Mx master 1
- Favorite switch: buckling springs
It is a great project and inspiring for sure. I am in the middle of a project I will post on the workshop once it's finished, I'm curious about how people will receive it as it involves acer switch over membrane and not everyone likes them, but they are everywhere and I can get them for free without much trouble.SneakyRobb wrote: ↑19 Sep 2020, 02:39Hi,M9HM wrote: ↑18 Sep 2020, 12:17any idea of what are you using the giant switch for yet?
I suggest a couple things:
-make it into a giant enter key (like those usb fluffy things you pound to hit enter) so you can hammer it down to send emails and stuff.
-go big or go home and make the world's biggest keyboard, full layout XD
Conceptually I made this switch for trouble shooting , testing switch concepts and inspiring. Making my own switches. A 4x scale is great. You can cut metal to fit. You can see better and touch. Whether it's a cherry MX, scale beamspring or alps switch. 4x scale allows more hands on thoughts.
I think there was actually a 4x scale keyboard. I think if you watch chyros review of the novelkeys 4x they show a 4x scale razor board.
Regardless the "point" of this project is perhaps novelty but more than that to inspire. I want to finish beamsprings first but this will be right after that
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hi sounds like a great project. My only recommendation is to quote user DMA and recommend you post what you have when you have it. The process is very important and id recommend against posting when your project is done. It's must more fun to follow a project alone vs just a single end product post! There is a reason we buy pistachios in the shell vs pre-shelled! The ones in the shell taste better.M9HM wrote: ↑19 Sep 2020, 13:25
It is a great project and inspiring for sure. I am in the middle of a project I will post on the workshop once it's finished, I'm curious about how people will receive it as it involves acer switch over membrane and not everyone likes them, but they are everywhere and I can get them for free without much trouble.
Also because of your post I went a head and printed the stem in the blue resin. The colour isn't the same, but heh it looks pretty good!
Also the dimensions are different because the previous PLA one was printed to fit an older top shell model. This new blue one doesn't fit it but it's a faithful model! Very happy with it, aside from the colour it looks great.
- Attachments
-
- compare 3.jpg (4.17 MiB) Viewed 8298 times
-
- compare 4.jpg (4.23 MiB) Viewed 8298 times
-
- stem compare.jpg (23.11 KiB) Viewed 8298 times
-
- stem 1.jpg (4.03 MiB) Viewed 8298 times
-
- stem 1 colour compare.jpg (4.21 MiB) Viewed 8298 times
-
- Location: Spain
- Main keyboard: Ibm model m
- Main mouse: Mx master 1
- Favorite switch: buckling springs
Really nice progress!
You are right, a post showing the process is better than a single final product post, but my job right now is keeping me from doing practically anything other than work, so, the project will have to wait a bit... maybe in a month or so I will have time to work on it again and will decide if show the progress or wait. Thanks for the comment!
You are right, a post showing the process is better than a single final product post, but my job right now is keeping me from doing practically anything other than work, so, the project will have to wait a bit... maybe in a month or so I will have time to work on it again and will decide if show the progress or wait. Thanks for the comment!
- joebeazelman
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: Model M
- Main mouse: Dell Optical
- Favorite switch: Model F
- DT Pro Member: -
I am beyond impressed with the creativity, ingenuity and Alpsqueda zealotry exhibited here. You will be rewarded in heaven with millions of virgin Alps switches in a rainbow of colors and variety of sounds.
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hi good to hear people are enjoying this project. Also Chyros your videos are great and I enjoy watching them.
I also want to see if I can make a neon green style actuation/tactile leaf for the big alps. I am ordering some skcm brown from orihalcon as I think the location of the leaf on those would be similar to neon green.
I also want to see if I can make a neon green style actuation/tactile leaf for the big alps. I am ordering some skcm brown from orihalcon as I think the location of the leaf on those would be similar to neon green.
- 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: -
Maybe you should contact Novelkeys / Kaihua to mass-produce these, like they did with the big MX switches ^^ . I'd SO buy a giant SKCM blue switch!
- joebeazelman
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: Model M
- Main mouse: Dell Optical
- Favorite switch: Model F
- DT Pro Member: -
It would be cool to have a bunch of these and mount them on a oversized mounting plate to make a large flat keyboard or keypad. It can be used to play arcade games with your feet. Care should be taken to not make the springs too stiff or it can become a trampoline.
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hi,
Many IRL work so slow progress but still alive. Did manage to print black top housing. Investigating alcohol dyes to match the original slider colour. Working to finish up a good usable switchplate model. Has presented some problems re:bending. Getting a proper bench vise so I can 3d print press dies in order to make the folds for the click leafs, both 4x and normal.
Many IRL work so slow progress but still alive. Did manage to print black top housing. Investigating alcohol dyes to match the original slider colour. Working to finish up a good usable switchplate model. Has presented some problems re:bending. Getting a proper bench vise so I can 3d print press dies in order to make the folds for the click leafs, both 4x and normal.
- Attachments
-
- IMG_20201116_113344.jpg (3.39 MiB) Viewed 7521 times
- anthonymak
- Location: Hong Kong
- Main keyboard: IBM Model F101
- Main mouse: Microsoft arc
- Favorite switch: Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: -
very interesting project.
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hi, minor update-ish.
Didn't want to risk going to my parent house where my CNC is due to pandemic. To make switchplate parts. Want to finish this project though. Decided to just drop cash, broke the bank and ordered some brass full size parts for switch plate. Used shapeways, which is extreme expensive. Should take a month to arrive.
Probably could have gotten less expensive somewhere else... oh well. Keyboards. I will buy some brass sheets later to cut the foil from. Then ill likely solder the foil to the fork part. Eventually I will also just use stencil maker to get better click leaf and actuation leaf as mine are quite rough.
Anyway its basically $100 for those switchplate parts... I think it will look ultra-cool when they arrive. I decided to not get gold plated brass as I'm not exactly looking for long term functionality with the switch. As well it will look more original. Excited to receive the parts though in order to make the switch actually functional.
Robb
Didn't want to risk going to my parent house where my CNC is due to pandemic. To make switchplate parts. Want to finish this project though. Decided to just drop cash, broke the bank and ordered some brass full size parts for switch plate. Used shapeways, which is extreme expensive. Should take a month to arrive.
Probably could have gotten less expensive somewhere else... oh well. Keyboards. I will buy some brass sheets later to cut the foil from. Then ill likely solder the foil to the fork part. Eventually I will also just use stencil maker to get better click leaf and actuation leaf as mine are quite rough.
Anyway its basically $100 for those switchplate parts... I think it will look ultra-cool when they arrive. I decided to not get gold plated brass as I'm not exactly looking for long term functionality with the switch. As well it will look more original. Excited to receive the parts though in order to make the switch actually functional.
Robb
- Attachments
-
- 50 bucks brass.JPG (67.32 KiB) Viewed 6998 times
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hi,
So these arrived. Neat.
Will need to figure how to attach brass sheet best. Maybe solder, maybe glue.
I think it might be mirrored... Shouldn't matter! Also cat hair on mouse pad.
So these arrived. Neat.
Will need to figure how to attach brass sheet best. Maybe solder, maybe glue.
I think it might be mirrored... Shouldn't matter! Also cat hair on mouse pad.
- Attachments
-
- IMG_20210309_090006.jpg (1.88 MiB) Viewed 6592 times
- SneakyRobb
- THINK
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: KB-5161A, F122, Dc2014, Typeheaven, Beamspring FXT
- Main mouse: MX518 Legendary
- DT Pro Member: 0242
Hey, thank lel.
I measured 0.001" for the foil on the original. I will try 0.003" foil for this big one.
I soldering seems annoying. I think I will just try glue at first to attach the foil. I will use siccor to cut the foil and try.
Also it is not mirrored. I just accidentally printed the lower part mirrored. Will make replacement.