Matias Quiet Clicks - scratchy?
- Bjerrk
- Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
- Main keyboard: Cherry G80-1800 & Models F & M
- Main mouse: Mouse Keys, Trackpoint, Trackball
- Favorite switch: IBM Buckling Springs+Beamspring, Alps Plate Spring
I have an Ortek AEK-style keyboard, which came with some fairly bad four-tab Alps clones (Xiang Min KSB-N, I believe).
So I desoldered them and bought a bunch of Matias Quiet Clicks from The Keyboard Co. to replace them:
The tactility and weighting of these switches are nice, but they are very scratchy. Is this par for the course with Matias switches?
While I don't mind scratchiness too much, it is slightly disappointing. What are your experiences - do they improve over time?
So I desoldered them and bought a bunch of Matias Quiet Clicks from The Keyboard Co. to replace them:
The tactility and weighting of these switches are nice, but they are very scratchy. Is this par for the course with Matias switches?
While I don't mind scratchiness too much, it is slightly disappointing. What are your experiences - do they improve over time?
- lispnick
- Location: Czechia
- Main keyboard: Keymacs A620N-88 Rev. A
- Main mouse: Kensington SlimBlade Trackball
- Favorite switch: Alps SKCM Orange
- Contact:
Can you identify the source of scratchiness?
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- Location: Canada
- Main keyboard: Focus FK-9000, heavily modded
- Main mouse: MX Master 3
My quiet linears are extremely smooth.
- TNT
- Location: Germany, Karlsruhe
- Main keyboard: Ellipse Model F77 / Zenith Z-150
- Main mouse: Logitech G203 Prodigy
- Favorite switch: It's complicated
- DT Pro Member: 0250
They feel rough compared to real alps, but they come well or maybe even overlubed, so it's unlikely that they're scratchy unless you somehow got defective units. I don't like their switches very much except the "quiet linears" with the dampening removed.
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- Location: Montreal
- Main keyboard: FK302 Matias Tactile Pro 4
- Main mouse: LOGI M570 roller ball
- Favorite switch: ALPS, MX Vintage Blacks
- DT Pro Member: -
I have a "Tactile Pro" (clicky) with their clickiest switches, and though I loved it when I first got it years ago, I do find it incredibly scratchy now. I will eventually try to linearize and lube these. I also had a "quiet click" keyboard (tactile) at work that I absolutely loved and I miss it. That one is much more faithful to the AEK heritage with a delicious tactile bump if you like that sort of thing. Not scratchy at all. And my Laptop pro also has nice "quiet click" tactile switches. Matias have a linear switch too that I suspect is nice.
In summary: yes, the clicky "Tactile Pro" is scratchy, but the tactile "Quiet Pros" are nice.
In summary: yes, the clicky "Tactile Pro" is scratchy, but the tactile "Quiet Pros" are nice.
- Bjerrk
- Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
- Main keyboard: Cherry G80-1800 & Models F & M
- Main mouse: Mouse Keys, Trackpoint, Trackball
- Favorite switch: IBM Buckling Springs+Beamspring, Alps Plate Spring
I have the Quiet Clicks, though.
I opened a few switches and tried a few different things.
First observation: Yes, they come factory lubed, however much of it has ended up on the tactile leaf, and not much on the rails. I guess that's fairly easy to explain, though.
Second observation: Click modding them makes them more fun
Third observation: After linearising, they feel a lot smoother. This leads me to suspect that the scratchiness isn't due so much to slider rails/housing interaction as such. Of course, the tactile leaf applies a lateral force to the slider which may exacerbate the scratchiness ...
- Bjerrk
- Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
- Main keyboard: Cherry G80-1800 & Models F & M
- Main mouse: Mouse Keys, Trackpoint, Trackball
- Favorite switch: IBM Buckling Springs+Beamspring, Alps Plate Spring
- 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
Aha! I agree with that guy, then.
I've got a bag of tasty cream complicated Alps, though maybe not enough for a full size. Definitely go with classic switches when you can.
I've got a bag of tasty cream complicated Alps, though maybe not enough for a full size. Definitely go with classic switches when you can.
- Bjerrk
- Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
- Main keyboard: Cherry G80-1800 & Models F & M
- Main mouse: Mouse Keys, Trackpoint, Trackball
- Favorite switch: IBM Buckling Springs+Beamspring, Alps Plate Spring
Writing this on a Copam K-430 keyboard with blue Alps But the prospect of a good contemporary Alps-a-like still draws me in ...
- 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
Kinda setting up the Matias switches for a fall with a comparison the like of that, aren't we!
I've a solid metal 60% with blues, too, and they're as good as their reputation. Damped Alps can be worth exploring, though, as they're just so different. I quite like them in the AEK II. Thus the bag of creams. But when I got that Alp64 PCB (along with my HHKB bluetooth controller) from Hasu, there was little doubt which switches were going into it, I'll confess!
I've a solid metal 60% with blues, too, and they're as good as their reputation. Damped Alps can be worth exploring, though, as they're just so different. I quite like them in the AEK II. Thus the bag of creams. But when I got that Alp64 PCB (along with my HHKB bluetooth controller) from Hasu, there was little doubt which switches were going into it, I'll confess!
- lispnick
- Location: Czechia
- Main keyboard: Keymacs A620N-88 Rev. A
- Main mouse: Kensington SlimBlade Trackball
- Favorite switch: Alps SKCM Orange
- Contact:
My observation: I have one bag of Matias Quiet switches that is 3 years old, all the switches there are heavily lubed and they feel really smooth. I do not like the double tactile bump and the dampeners either but their travel is definitely smooth. On the other hand, I opened a newer bag of the same switches (1 year old) and there is no lube at all, not a trace. Compared the the older ones, these do feel scratchy. I tried to apply the NyoGel/OKS lube combination to the sliders and the result is fine, I think better than the 3-years-old switches.
- Bjerrk
- Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
- Main keyboard: Cherry G80-1800 & Models F & M
- Main mouse: Mouse Keys, Trackpoint, Trackball
- Favorite switch: IBM Buckling Springs+Beamspring, Alps Plate Spring
Thanks, Lispnick! I have been considering trying out that combination (even though finding a vendor was tricky).lispnick wrote: ↑22 Apr 2021, 14:51My observation: I have one bag of Matias Quiet switches that is 3 years old, all the switches there are heavily lubed and they feel really smooth. I do not like the double tactile bump and the dampeners either but their travel is definitely smooth. On the other hand, I opened a newer bag of the same switches (1 year old) and there is no lube at all, not a trace. Compared the the older ones, these do feel scratchy. I tried to apply the NyoGel/OKS lube combination to the sliders and the result is fine, I think better than the 3-years-old switches.