IBM 3277 find (mini beamspring) -> Solenoid movie!
- ro0llo
- Location: Netherlands
- Main keyboard: F62 ultra compact / IBM 3277 BS
- Main mouse: G903
- Favorite switch: Model F
After 3 years of searching finally got myself a beamspring! I restored it in the last couple of weeks, here is the result and a soundcheck!
Restoration log Warning lots of pictures!
Just a regular saterday afternoon, browsing local add sites. Then saw this:
Translates to: Keyboard very old, IBM input or punch card station, with click
My heart made a little jump. Directly called this person by phone, hoping nobody else had seen it yet. Happened to be a very old man. Jumped in the car and drove to his house, was a 1 hour ride so very doable. His house was full of other old computer stuff from "ESCOM". He talked to me like 2 hours. He bought a lot of stuff from ESCOM when this company went bankrupt so he expects the keyboard to come from there.
So I came home with this:
Taking some pictures so I know where the keys need to be put back
Started taking it apart carefully:
Peeking under the skirt:
11 november 1977
It's really clean considering its age and the house where I found it
Let's get rid of this:
No rust
So I went to take it apart further.
Cleaned to bottom plate and oiled with ballistol:
And the outside case:
Refurbished the solenoid:
Evoperusted the screws and later oiled with ballistol:
Took the switched apart and restored them (cleaned, or evaporust & ballistol):
Ordered emdude's pcb @ jlcpcb; look at the difference
Cutting the neoprene foam:
Building time!
TADA
Solenoid!!! It was in a great state to start with, almost no rust except for some small spots. What has been done:
- Completely dis- and re- assembled and cleaned including all the switches
- Springs, screws and stems took an evaporust bath (and afterwards ballistol applied)
- All metal parts took an ballistol bath for protection
- New 2mm neoprene foam (used for the gaskets as well)
- Emdude 3277 pcb: viewtopic.php?f=7&t=16867
- Pandrews controller: viewtopic.php?f=50&t=24512
- Solenoid driver installed
Restoration log Warning lots of pictures!
Just a regular saterday afternoon, browsing local add sites. Then saw this:
Translates to: Keyboard very old, IBM input or punch card station, with click
My heart made a little jump. Directly called this person by phone, hoping nobody else had seen it yet. Happened to be a very old man. Jumped in the car and drove to his house, was a 1 hour ride so very doable. His house was full of other old computer stuff from "ESCOM". He talked to me like 2 hours. He bought a lot of stuff from ESCOM when this company went bankrupt so he expects the keyboard to come from there.
So I came home with this:
Taking some pictures so I know where the keys need to be put back
Started taking it apart carefully:
Peeking under the skirt:
11 november 1977
It's really clean considering its age and the house where I found it
Let's get rid of this:
No rust
So I went to take it apart further.
Cleaned to bottom plate and oiled with ballistol:
And the outside case:
Refurbished the solenoid:
Evoperusted the screws and later oiled with ballistol:
Took the switched apart and restored them (cleaned, or evaporust & ballistol):
Ordered emdude's pcb @ jlcpcb; look at the difference
Cutting the neoprene foam:
Building time!
TADA
Solenoid!!! It was in a great state to start with, almost no rust except for some small spots. What has been done:
- Completely dis- and re- assembled and cleaned including all the switches
- Springs, screws and stems took an evaporust bath (and afterwards ballistol applied)
- All metal parts took an ballistol bath for protection
- New 2mm neoprene foam (used for the gaskets as well)
- Emdude 3277 pcb: viewtopic.php?f=7&t=16867
- Pandrews controller: viewtopic.php?f=50&t=24512
- Solenoid driver installed
Last edited by ro0llo on 28 Jul 2021, 16:52, edited 13 times in total.
- ro0llo
- Location: Netherlands
- Main keyboard: F62 ultra compact / IBM 3277 BS
- Main mouse: G903
- Favorite switch: Model F
Yes this is their original placing! You can also see this around the integrated numpad cluster. I’m dutch btw so the whole french layout thingy doesnt add much for me personally Wouldve preffered regular qwerty
- Muramasa
- Location: Scotland
- Main keyboard: IBM 3276 Cyrillic
- Main mouse: Razer Deathadder
- Favorite switch: Beamspring / SKCM Blue
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
Congrats on the find! that's a really rare beamer you have there. I believe that is the data entry version with the integrated Numpad, and what's really cool is the keycaps for the Numpad are triple shots I believe! (Well, they are triple shots on my Microswitch version of the same board) Let me know if they are
- ro0llo
- Location: Netherlands
- Main keyboard: F62 ultra compact / IBM 3277 BS
- Main mouse: G903
- Favorite switch: Model F
Thank you! Yes they are indeed triple shot, didn’t even knew that existed xD Can you explain a bit what is rare about it? The keyboard as in a 3277 66 key version or are you referring to the specific keyset that is on it? I do know there also exist is 78 key version.
- Weezer
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: IBM F122
- Main mouse: Dell 0KKMH5
- Favorite switch: IBM buckling spring & beam spring
All beamsprings are rare, but I believe they're referring to the data entry keycaps on yours, especially since it's an azerty keyboard.ro0llo wrote: ↑08 Nov 2020, 21:34Thank you! Yes they are indeed triple shot, didn’t even knew that existed xD Can you explain a bit what is rare about it? The keyboard as in a 3277 66 key version or are you referring to the specific keyset that is on it? I do know there also exist is 78 key version.
- 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:
Yeah that's a rarer model of a rarer model
- ro0llo
- Location: Netherlands
- Main keyboard: F62 ultra compact / IBM 3277 BS
- Main mouse: G903
- Favorite switch: Model F
Thank you all guys! My partner is from Belgium (they use Azerty over there) so I guess I will keep those keycaps as it does fit in with our family that way haha
Just finished with uploading the pictures from the restoration! Warning lots of pictures!
Spoiler:
- ro0llo
- Location: Netherlands
- Main keyboard: F62 ultra compact / IBM 3277 BS
- Main mouse: G903
- Favorite switch: Model F
Spend 3 years checking local second hand websites daily (Ebay is no chance, way too expensive and to much competition). This was the first beamspring I’ve seen appearing there in all this time and I’m certain I’ve not missed a single add So just luck I guess.
Yea I was suprised as well. They are installed on random keys as you can see from the pictures before taking it apart. No difference in typing feel BUT I had a very hard time removing the stems from them. They were much, much tighter then the white ones. I’ve inspected them closely but couldnt find any difference except for the color. Maybe IBM used them as replacement parts or something?
- ro0llo
- Location: Netherlands
- Main keyboard: F62 ultra compact / IBM 3277 BS
- Main mouse: G903
- Favorite switch: Model F
The solenoid is connected! Again thanks to pandrew for answering all my questions via PM!
Earlier video where I had not adjusted the solenoid yet for maximum sound but here you can see the inside
Earlier video where I had not adjusted the solenoid yet for maximum sound but here you can see the inside