I would argue that the precedent presented by the previous SSK line and its success heavily implies that revival projects are most successful when made with enthusiasts wanting a total reproduction in mind. There have been similar remanufacturing projects in the past where companies a lot larger than Model F labs have tried to revive a switch design exclusively for use in modern layouts and tanking or just not being as widely adopted by said enthusiasts.Hak Foo wrote: ↑16 Dec 2022, 01:36I strongly disagree. As you said, it's an enthusiast product, but what is the exact selection of enthusiasts you're appealing to? There are a bunch of different groups within the "I will pay $500 for a keyboard" crowd. Some of them are drawn to beamsprings because of the legends of their feel, not because they're in love with 1970s IBM industrial aesthetics or layout ergonomics.
First thing that comes to mind is the countless hall effect switches and the Matias Alps line. Despite the modern layout as well as hall effects being very smooth and excellent for performance they have lost traction with enthusiasts, such as Wooting or when Cherry tried to officially make a hall effect design but then immediately cancel it due to lack of interest. The only thing keeping interest in hall effects in modern layouts is the open source scene with things such as the void switch. Matias tried to appeal to the enthusiast market with their Alps line being fitted in modern layout keyboards, but you still hear about people buying original Alps boards and not even using the modern Matias switches. The only real selling point the modern Alps has now is getting 200 of the damn things for £50.
Compare this to the introduction of the new Model F SSK and the difference is night and day.
That is perfectly fair, as I have said previously on this topic ANSI and ISO is by an large the most convenient. For me I really like ISO, but I don't necessarily let my layout preferences dictate what keyboards I buy as long as the layout is reminiscent of ANSI / ISO key placement, something which I feel in the case of the Beasmpring applies. The Beamspring I am currently restoring is totally different to what I am used to, but I do indeed plan on making it my daily driver despite that fact. I understand this is a purely anecdotal example, but I am just highlighting it in response to your own anecdote.Even people drawn in by nostalgia may end up not preferring specific layouts. The first keyboards I fell in love with were Focus FK-2001s, but over the years I grew to prefer conventional ANSI over the BAE-and-guess-where-THIS-manufacturer-put-backslash games.
That's what I am arguing about, the market appears to favor the latter group wanting newly manufactured boards over just switches.At a minimum, we can say there's two markets: people who want a *beamspring switch keyboard* and people who want a *newly manufactured 5251/etc. board*.
The first group may be driven away from a board with vintage ergonomics or layout, but the latter group might require it to open their wallets. It's not entirely clear how the market breaks.
This is something I can totally get behind.I also wonder what the price ceiling is for "new manufactured" keyboards. From experience, you can build a full-custom 1-of-1 keyboard for about USD500, if you stick to simple case designs (i. e. a sandwich case with 3-D printed or cut-acrylic filler layers) At that price, if the initial tooling and scale up are successful, maybe the beamspring modules end up making their way into the designer community and we see other projects that solve the layout and case problems.
If both ends of the market can be satisfied with custom case aftermarkets that would be brilliant. Unfortunately I doubt that will happen aside from a select few of hardcore DIY's. As long as the Beamspring switches are reliant on a membrane it will not really be accessible as most enthusiasts don't know or have the resources to recreate a membrane for a custom layout. Even with the far more well established Model M crowd custom layouts are few and far between and are often done cutting up or combining pre-existing membranes.
If I appear to be too firebrand I do apologize, but I just feel that with such small start ups like Model F Lab's new Beamspring keyboard they can only really cater to one of the two kinds of keyboard enthusiast due to manufacturing limitations and it appears they have made that choice. And while their choice is the most accessible one, it seems to ironically be the most alienating for the enthusiast consumer base they have previously cultivated on the notion of bringing back old keyboards.