As a test or as a definitive measure? That would bring the reliability from 100 millions actuations to 100.
(Model MF) Remodeling the Model M (aka.. the Mara)
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- Location: Italy
- DT Pro Member: -
He said that he was going to add some graphite to the mix. About 20%Hypersphere wrote: ↑02 Aug 2020, 16:35@SneakyRobb: The shape of the flipper looks good. However, does it have capactitive properties? The model F flippers have either carbon black or short carbon fibers added to the plastic to impart electrical capacitance. Have you added either of these ingredients to your resin?
- DMA
- Location: Seattle, US
- Main keyboard: T420
- Main mouse: Trackpoint
- Favorite switch: beamspring
- DT Pro Member: NaN
- Contact:
What a way to discourage people from doing things. Erisie, demonstrate the guy yer middle finger and proceed. Just plan for several iterations of PCB layout. CommonSense is much more forgiving - but no QMK, ever. Make your choicegianni wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 09:42I don't know how and why you think that you'll be able to succeed where other people have found big difficulties that make a project like this a really big task that involves engineering, programming, computer science, while requiring a lot of passion and dedication. And a good mood too, to deal with people that treat you like a clerk in an convenience store. The best that you can do is join this project, and when it will be successful, making all the possible layout variations will be the obvious next step.
except..
* plates don't need to be curved (see wcass' gorgeous CNCed beast of a keyboard)
* plates don't need to be metal - just strong enough to withstand the force of the springs. Acrylic is A-OK.
* foam is not indispensable - it only affects the sound. Note the word. Not "enhances". Not "improves". Just "affects". Nothing more, nothing less.
* Ground plane is still required under the pads. Tin foil is perfectly adequate for the task, just put a mylar sheet on top of it. Should you want sometihng more substantial - again, wcass has shown us the way of 4-layer PCB (borderless, too).
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- Location: Germany
- Main keyboard: Model F77
- Main mouse: Logitech MX Master 3S
- Favorite switch: Alpaca V2
Fully agree with DMA on this.
Troy Fletcher also made it out of acrylic and had a flat plate.
I don't have foam on one of my boards - I think it sounds even better. But that's a matter of personal opinion.
Also, it's worth mentioning - one can use conductive paint on the those 3D printed flippers.
Troy Fletcher also made it out of acrylic and had a flat plate.
I don't have foam on one of my boards - I think it sounds even better. But that's a matter of personal opinion.
Also, it's worth mentioning - one can use conductive paint on the those 3D printed flippers.
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- Location: Italy
- DT Pro Member: -
You're just unpolite and detached from reality. I'm trying to be realistic and to save a guy with good intentions some delusions. He doesn't even know how to make a pcb, which is the simplest task. He pretends to do alone what the most experienced guys here have failed to do collectively. Surely if he spends a lot of time trying he'll succeed, but I wonder why he shouldn't just contribute to this project and then adapt the outcome to his layout. He's just trying to fork this project into a new one without knowing anything. Since I respect this guy and I don't like to make people waste their time, I've politely pointed out that his task is very difficult. On the other hand you're having fun looking at a guy that tries to do completely alone a very complicated project, forcing people that are working toward another objective to help him, hijacking a thread that his devoted to make a model m with a standard layout.DMA wrote: ↑03 Aug 2020, 03:56What a way to discourage people from doing things. Erisie, demonstrate the guy yer middle finger and proceed. Just plan for several iterations of PCB layout. CommonSense is much more forgiving - but no QMK, ever. Make your choicegianni wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 09:42I don't know how and why you think that you'll be able to succeed where other people have found big difficulties that make a project like this a really big task that involves engineering, programming, computer science, while requiring a lot of passion and dedication. And a good mood too, to deal with people that treat you like a clerk in an convenience store. The best that you can do is join this project, and when it will be successful, making all the possible layout variations will be the obvious next step.
except..
* plates don't need to be curved (see wcass' gorgeous CNCed beast of a keyboard)
* plates don't need to be metal - just strong enough to withstand the force of the springs. Acrylic is A-OK.
* foam is not indispensable - it only affects the sound. Note the word. Not "enhances". Not "improves". Just "affects". Nothing more, nothing less.
* Ground plane is still required under the pads. Tin foil is perfectly adequate for the task, just put a mylar sheet on top of it. Should you want sometihng more substantial - again, wcass has shown us the way of 4-layer PCB (borderless, too).
- DMA
- Location: Seattle, US
- Main keyboard: T420
- Main mouse: Trackpoint
- Favorite switch: beamspring
- DT Pro Member: NaN
- Contact:
Guilty as charged.
Do you have a psychiatrist license to diagnose psychosis? If not - care to apologize?
Suuuure.
Neither did I, four years ago.
And what is wrong with that, exactly?
Remote collaboration bears a huge overhead cost. I vividly remember frustration of laying out CS-MF not knowing how much vertical clearance I have between me and CONDUCTIVE bottom plate. Fifteen-minute discussion with everything on hand. Impossible otherwise.
Yeah. I ended up spending $3k on a single keyboard. But it's on my desk and it gives me joy every day.
If I listened to likes of you back then (there's an ample supply of your kind at all times, 2016 wasn't an exception), I'd have a mitsumi(or dell) rubber dome instead - because I'm not crazy to pay $400 for a keyboard. And there would be no wingnut on my desk, that's for sure.
Becase his is a _completely_ different project, he won't be able to reuse ANY parts. The only common parts are barrels, flippers, and keycaps. All of which are available commercially as of today, in virtually unlimited quantity.
Besides, you just accused him of being useless a sentence ago. What can he contribute if he doesn't even know how to do "the simplest task"? Money?
Fork? Read the message, he's sanity-checking his plans.
What exactly is wrong with that, again? Everybody needs to start somewhere.
No, you were just being a jerk. "I don't know how and why you think that you'll be able to succeed" is far from polite and a light years away from respectful.
It's not "very complicated".
He has the PCB already (well, he still needs to export to gerbers and place an order, but that's half an hour tops).
If he won't make a mistake of using xwhatsit for the prototype, all that remains is an acrylic plate with like 120 holes, another one with like 10, dozen bolts with nuts and a controller.
I don't know how to cut acrylic, but we can always ask wcass how he did his shiny battleship and I'm pretty sure he'll be glad to explain (knowing him - he may even produce the draft model for the cutting shop).
And if he decides to use CS and will want it in custom form factor - I'll gladly design the PCB and even assemble the controller if he ships that PCB and components to me.
It would definitely not be cheap due to Ellipse gouging $1 per switch out of the community. But complicated? Hell no.
Waitwhat? forcing? I don't see any guns pointed to anybody's head.
It was, indeed. Four years ago. Even two.
But this year it's a discussion of how to make flippers - not because the technology is lost, but because Ellipse refuses to sell them at a reasonable price.
SO. Stop being a jerk, apologize to Erizie, and NEVER AGAIN discourage people from trying a new hobby. It's a friggin HOBBY, the journey is as important as the destination, if not more.
It's not your money, it's not your time. If you have something positive/supportive to say - say it (preferably in a non-condescending manner, and avoiding any commitments or setting any time frames.). If not - JUST DON'T. Not your business.
If _you_ _personally_ walked that particular path and want to share your findings - make a post (you should've done it back then!) and refer to it.
A friendly reminder to all of you
Please post about things you tinker with and post as you go, not when it's all 100% complete (unless you're planning to make money of it, hehe). Those posts are proverbial Shoulders of Giants. You - you personally - are The Giant. Do your part.
No matter your experience level, no matter how stupid/trivial things you're doing - post the progress. If you don't - that knowledge you gained today is lost in a year. Like tears in the rain and all that.
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- Main keyboard: IBM Model M 1391506
- Main mouse: Microsoft Intellimouse 1.0A
I just want to say this: thank you, thank you, DMA.
And yes, I am perfectly aware that the only thing I would be able to reuse from my existing Model M is the case: everything else would have to be created (PCB, controller, top and bottom frames) or bought (hammers, keycaps, barrels).
See? I wasn't even aware of the existence of the CommonSense controller until I read it here. I thought my options were limited to QMK and xwhatsit.
And yes, I am perfectly aware that the only thing I would be able to reuse from my existing Model M is the case: everything else would have to be created (PCB, controller, top and bottom frames) or bought (hammers, keycaps, barrels).
Gianni, question: if I wanted to "do [it] alone", would I use an existing design as a template? Would I come to a forum to ask for help on the project?
I have never done any such thing. All I did was asking whether my modified PCB layout design could work, and, if not, what changes were needed. At any point I have "forced" or "hijacked" anything at all. So stop saying that.
- wcass
- Location: Columbus, OH, USA
- Main keyboard: ibm model m
- Main mouse: kensington expert mouse
- Favorite switch: buckeling spring
- DT Pro Member: 0185
A basic principal of capacitive and contact keyboard matrix design; rows and columns should intersect exactly once. If they intersect more than once, you will have two switches that produce the same result (at best) or two that do nothing (at worst). Your 121 key matrix will likely be 6 by 21 or 22. If you have a spreadsheet app, lay it out ... rows 1 through 6, lettered columns A through U or V... it is OK to have unused cells, but you can't have two switches in one cell. You can have two functions for one switch via layers, but the switches themselves must be unique.
That is a good starting place.
That is a good starting place.
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- Main keyboard: IBM Model M 1391506
- Main mouse: Microsoft Intellimouse 1.0A
Gotcha.wcass wrote: ↑05 Aug 2020, 03:47A basic principal of capacitive and contact keyboard matrix design; rows and columns should intersect exactly once. If they intersect more than once, you will have two switches that produce the same result (at best) or two that do nothing (at worst). Your 121 key matrix will likely be 6 by 21 or 22. If you have a spreadsheet app, lay it out ... rows 1 through 6, lettered columns A through U or V... it is OK to have unused cells, but you can't have two switches in one cell. You can have two functions for one switch via layers, but the switches themselves must be unique.
That is a good starting place.
I was checking out i$'s FEXT design again, and I noticed that the reason that you see contiguous column traces is because the row traces are a total clusterf**k (obviously, a necessity in order to work around the original M mounting holes): a single PCB row in his design spans more than one "physical" row, moving up and down the board in order to fit the design. Since I'm using PCB rows that are parallel to the physical key rows, I can't have that workaround.
I had made the dummy mistake of thinking that you could share more than one row contact in a single column (which, for what little I know about these things, didn't make sense to me while working with the design). It's an easy correction from there. I'll post my corrected design as soon as it is done.
Thank you!
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- Location: Italy
- DT Pro Member: -
Just two guys trying to divert the thread from remodeling the model f to making from zero a model f with an ortholinear layout and asking for help here, publishing pcbs made with photoshop, with so many errors that nobody wanted to look at those drawings.
This is offtopic and should stop.
- ppCircle
- Location: Polska
- Main keyboard: Focus Fk-2002 HS Alps Blue / IBM 5140 Alps Brown
- Main mouse: Rival 300
- Favorite switch: Alps Blue / Alps Amber / Alps Brown / Alps N Green
- Contact:
It's actually interesting, because they are insanely smooth. I need model f to compare but it's definitely better than model m.
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- Main keyboard: IBM Model M 1391506
- Main mouse: Microsoft Intellimouse 1.0A
I am not forcing anyone to do anything. Do you even understand what "forcing" means?
Unless they are "nobody" to you, I already got feedback from wcass and DMA on my idea.
Has anyone ever told you that you are a very impolite individual, gianni?
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- Location: Italy
- DT Pro Member: -
stop with this spam show, nobody cares, write to me with a pm if you have something else to say
This is what someone else said about you. He says what I said, but that's ok for you.
"...There are actually too many things wrong for me to go into it. ....
The idea behind this thread is to take an off-the-shelf M and make it an F by swapping out just membrane, flippers, and controller. Changing the key layout to ortholiniear would require that AND a new barrel frame and probably back plate."
Really, stop this shit show, you're diminishing yourself.
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- Main keyboard: IBM Model M 1391506
- Main mouse: Microsoft Intellimouse 1.0A
I followed your advice, wcass. I redesigned i$'s layout to make it work according to the specifications (six rows, 22 columns, for a total of 113 potential keys) and this is the PCB result:wcass wrote: ↑05 Aug 2020, 03:47A basic principal of capacitive and contact keyboard matrix design; rows and columns should intersect exactly once. If they intersect more than once, you will have two switches that produce the same result (at best) or two that do nothing (at worst). Your 121 key matrix will likely be 6 by 21 or 22. If you have a spreadsheet app, lay it out ... rows 1 through 6, lettered columns A through U or V... it is OK to have unused cells, but you can't have two switches in one cell. You can have two functions for one switch via layers, but the switches themselves must be unique.
Top/Bottom
Top
Bottom
What else would it need to be done for this design to become viable?
Thanks again for your help.
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- Bottom.pdf
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- Top-Bottom.pdf
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- Location: Romania
Fricked is doing something interesting here, make sure to fill in his interest check survey:
viewtopic.php?f=7&t=24559
viewtopic.php?f=7&t=24559
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- Main keyboard: Filco Majestouch 2 Japanese
- Main mouse: Logitech G600
- Favorite switch: Model F
- DT Pro Member: -
Hi all, are the CAD files available somewhere? I have a project I'd like to build for myself, an unusual layout keyboard, and it would be helpful to build on someone else's design. I've read a bit of the thread but it's super long and there isn't a summary.
- Muirium
- µ
- Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
- Main keyboard: HHKB Type-S with Bluetooth by Hasu
- Main mouse: Apple Magic Mouse
- Favorite switch: Gotta Try 'Em All
- DT Pro Member: µ
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- Location: Malaysia
- Main keyboard: Dell AT101W Blue ALPS
- Main mouse: Logiteh G304
- Favorite switch: Blue Alps for now
I've had the FSSK, loved it. But I actually need the windows key as a lowly windows programmer. I know you can split the shift on the FSSK but eh. The new Mini M looks sexy too, and for a good price, yea that's my capacitive buckling springs endgame there
- tentator
- Location: ZH, CH
- Main keyboard: MX blue tentboard
- Main mouse: Pointing Stick
- Favorite switch: Cherry MX Blue and Model F BS
- DT Pro Member: -
- micrex22
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: UltraNav
- Favorite switch: BS
- DT Pro Member: -
So it looks like there are "FSSK" keyboards being sold now.
Does anyone know if these assemblies will fit in an model M SSK? Because then that basically solves our problem:
https://www.modelfkeyboards.com/product ... -keyboard/
Cheers,
Does anyone know if these assemblies will fit in an model M SSK? Because then that basically solves our problem:
https://www.modelfkeyboards.com/product ... -keyboard/
Cheers,
- Muirium
- µ
- Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
- Main keyboard: HHKB Type-S with Bluetooth by Hasu
- Main mouse: Apple Magic Mouse
- Favorite switch: Gotta Try 'Em All
- DT Pro Member: µ
Ask Ellipse, the man behind them. He’s active here on DT, too.
I know where you’re coming from re: shell compatibility. His aesthetic is… clunky to the point of brutal. Don’t know if he’s done us a favour and kept his design within IBM’s shell tolerances. Certainly wouldn’t count on it until proved.
I know where you’re coming from re: shell compatibility. His aesthetic is… clunky to the point of brutal. Don’t know if he’s done us a favour and kept his design within IBM’s shell tolerances. Certainly wouldn’t count on it until proved.
- micrex22
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: UltraNav
- Favorite switch: BS
- DT Pro Member: -
Well it's moreso because the SSK assemblies in mine brokeMuirium wrote: ↑20 May 2023, 11:35Ask Ellipse, the man behind them. He’s active here on DT, too.
I know where you’re coming from re: shell compatibility. His aesthetic is… clunky to the point of brutal. Don’t know if he’s done us a favour and kept his design within IBM’s shell tolerances. Certainly wouldn’t count on it until proved.
So it would be nice to use them again
- micrex22
- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: UltraNav
- Favorite switch: BS
- DT Pro Member: -
Well, the first one started to crack because SSK plastic assemblies are VIRTUALLY CRACKING out of box from the stress they're in. And then the other one fell off from a high shelf where I was storing it and it split in half completely.
I'll just have fun with my two empty shells
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- shells.jpg (167.56 KiB) Viewed 11508 times
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- ssk_crack.jpg (259.46 KiB) Viewed 11508 times
- Muirium
- µ
- Location: Edinburgh, Scotland
- Main keyboard: HHKB Type-S with Bluetooth by Hasu
- Main mouse: Apple Magic Mouse
- Favorite switch: Gotta Try 'Em All
- DT Pro Member: µ
Well, look on the bright side: the cool grey industrial one should be very easy to sell.
When I’m next in California, I’ll have my SSK with me to install Taylor Swift’s FSSK upgrade which is waiting with family over there. Think that will leave me with a spare SSK barrel plate on my hands if that’s all you need. I’m keeping the metal backplate and caps, though.
When I’m next in California, I’ll have my SSK with me to install Taylor Swift’s FSSK upgrade which is waiting with family over there. Think that will leave me with a spare SSK barrel plate on my hands if that’s all you need. I’m keeping the metal backplate and caps, though.