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A project log for Steno Keyboard

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dehipudeʃhipu 04/15/2016 at 12:585 Comments

Last Monday I worked a little bit more on this keyboard. I decided to start on the wiring. I did the rows, and then I decided the keys are not sitting in their holes well enough. So I decided to do what I did with my previous two keyboards -- glue the switches in place.

Unfortunately, this time I used instant glue, and applied it when the keyboard was up-side-down, so that the glue got into the switches. Sure enough, they are all glued hard, and there is no force that could budge them now. I suppose I could try removing them, opening each and cleaning, but they would never again work as well as before, and I honestly don't have any stamina left to do it.

So I'm aborting this project, with a small possibility of reviving it if I get my hands on some spare switches again.

Discussions

Jeremiah Johnson wrote 04/18/2016 at 03:43 point

shame.  I like the idea of a stenographer keyboard.

Perhaps it would be easier to design a PCB and solder the switches in, rather than rely on dremel'd faceplate for mounting.  That alone could thin the design a bit, it isn't a huge PCB, and you wouldn't need to glue anything.

Digikey has Cherry MX switches for as little as $0.70 each in quantities of 25.

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deʃhipu wrote 04/18/2016 at 08:40 point

Well, I considered using a PCB in my previous keyboards, but then I looked at the price of such a large board, and decided I can as well just wire them by hand... This one is admittedly considerably smaller than a standard keyboard, so it might work. It wouldn't save me any height though.

Thanks for the hint about digikey, I might use that if I decide to come back to this project. For now I need to take a break from it, though.

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Jeremiah Johnson wrote 04/18/2016 at 16:59 point

ok, that's fine.  Can I ask what you use to turn the keystrokes into whatever the computer is expecting?  (I imagine that would be USB-HID, yes?)

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deʃhipu wrote 04/18/2016 at 19:50 point

Yes, I planned to use a Pro Micro board with ATMega32u4 on it, and the tmk_keyboard firmware for it, just like I did in the first version of #Alpen Clack.

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Yann Guidon / YGDES wrote 04/15/2016 at 15:37 point

Type In Peace...

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