geekhack
geekhack Community => Keyboards => Topic started by: Whiskey in the Jar-o on Thu, 20 September 2007, 03:53:36
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Does anybody remember Honeywell keyboards from the mid-90s? I know they are not clicky, heck not even mechanical, but to me they were just about the best membrane keyboard ever. They sold their keyboard business to Keytronic sometime last decade. I used a 1999 model Keytronic ergotouch (??) for about 3 years from 2000. It felt just like a Honeywell. I've seen reports that more recent Keytronics have a much cheaper key-feel. Anyone knows?
Also, I keep seeing references on the web to Hall-effect Honeywell keyboards, yet I've never been able to find anything concrete. Does anyone know anything about them?
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I've heard of hall-effect keyboards on Wikipedia, but I've never actually seen one. There's this article (http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EKF/is_n1965_v39/ai_13899523) that refers to Honeywell.
As for the old Honeywell rubber-dome keyboards, there's the classic model Keytronic (http://www.keytronicems.com/home/index.html) has to offer:
Now shipping with Ergo Technology. Most keyboards use a standard 55 grams of force required to register every key, Ergo Technology has 5 different levels of force. From 35 grams to 80 grams - that correspond to the strength of the finger that touches the keys. The result is more comfort for your hands.
Now I don't know if this is the keyboard you're actually referring to. There's also the Eurotech.
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I've seen this article before - the only reference I found to Honewell hall-effect keyboards. Here's an ancient calculator with hall-effect keys:
http://www.oldcalculatormuseum.com/sperryedc3.html