Input Club Halo
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Manufacturer | Kailh |
---|---|
Inventor | Jacob Alexander (HaaTa) |
Introduced | November 2017 |
Switch type | Tactile |
Sense method | Metal leaf |
Keycap mount | Cherry MX mount |
The Halo switches are Cherry MX clones designed by Jacob Alexander (HaaTa) of Input Club and manufactured by Kailh.
Contents
Variants
The Halo True was designed to resemble the smooth and tactile Topre switches but be mechanical and Cherry MX-compatible.
The Halo Clear uses the same slider shape as the Halo True but a spring closer to a Cherry MX Clear. The design was chosen because Cherry had not made any RGB-version of the MX Clear.[1]
Name | Stem colour | Tactile force | Actuation force | Bottom-out force | Tactile event | Actuation event | Web site |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Halo Clear | Translucent white | 65 g | 52 g | 78 g | 0.5 mm | 1.9 mm | link |
Halo True | Salmon | 60 g | 54 g | 100 g | 0.5 mm | 1.9 mm | link |
Availability
The group order ("drop") on Massdrop for the Input Club K-Type has so far (November 2017) been the only way to acquire the switches.
Input Club had developed and funded the switches together with Massdrop under an as yet undisclosed agreement which divided rights between them. Both parties are currently in a disagreement over if or how Input Club would be allowed to distribute Halo switches through other channels than Massdrop.[2]
See also
References
- ↑ Tom's Hardware — Made By Kaihua, Designed By Input Club: New Halo True, Halo Clear Mechanical Keyboard Switches. Dated 2017-05-17. Retrieved 2017-11-03.
- ↑ Tom's Hardware — Massdrop, Input Club Feuding Over 'Halo' Mechanical Keyboard Switches.