I'd say the tactility of the topre switch lies in that the key registers when passing the hump rather than when bottoming out like on a regular membrane rubber dome.
Yes indeed they are tactile, very much so in fact. It's just that they are very smooth and refined with a large bump. If you ever get the chance to try a black cherry switch (linear) you would definately understand that the Topre is tactile. Actually if you ever get to try a mechanical board that is purely linear (no progressive force) the black cherry feels pretty darn good and much different.
=)
I'll trade you, straight up for five, brand new, $12 keyboards if you'd like. ;)
Topre is not my all-time favorite switch, but I do like them quite a bit. I would spend some dedicated time on your realforce if I were you.
I'd say the tactility of the topre switch lies in that the key registers when passing the hump rather than when bottoming out like on a regular membrane rubber dome.
Yep. Tactile feedback simply means there is something you can feel (in this case, that "bump") that corresponds to the keyswitch being activated.
It keeps you from having to slam your fingers, full force, to the bottom of the keystroke to register a keypress. Feedback (audible and tactile) allow you to let off on the key once you recognize the positive feedback that the key has been actuated...softening the force at the bottom, or even sometimes allowing you to not bottom out at all (if you so desire).
You're not imagining it. It's why the Topre is #3 on my list. I prefer sharper tactile points.
Rubber Dome.Show Image(http://geekhack.org/attachment.php?attachmentid=11427&d=1277686258)
Topre.Show Image(http://geekhack.org/attachment.php?attachmentid=10478&stc=1&d=1275356653)
So merely the existence of a bump does not make the switch tactile?
I still don't *get* the Topre thing, but I've never typed on one.
I still don't *get* the Topre thing, but I've never typed on one. It sure seems like a lot of fuss and a lot of dough for a rubber dome.
the switch gives tactile feedback when pressed
I still don't *get* the Topre thing, but I've never typed on one. It sure seems like a lot of fuss and a lot of dough for a rubber dome.
It's too simplistic to call it a "rubber dome"
? The cup rubber is 30-40% of the build costs?
How did you get that number? - it's pretty standard stuff and someone just posted an almost identical rubber dome sheet from a cheap Japanese keyboard.
Although I do agree that it is the quality of overall construction and the capacitive switch point that makes it feel much better than a rubber dome.
I don't agree with that. Plenty of switches have a tactile bump in a different place than the actuation point yet I'd consider the switch tactile.Show Image(http://geekhack.org/attachment.php?attachmentid=11339&d=1277307720)
That definition would make it so confusing nobody would have any idea what we are talking about.
It's simply the switch gives tactile feedback when pressed (and I don't mean the bottoming out). A scissor switch is tactile. A mouse click is tactile and clicky.
cnet never mentioned tactile
http://reviews.cnet.com/keyboards/realforce-103ub-55g-black/4505-3134_7-34426331.html (http://reviews.cnet.com/keyboards/realforce-103ub-55g-black/4505-3134_7-34426331.html)
and got a 3/5 star.
of course the basic argument is 350$ and no usb hub?
Well, I still think Scissor switches are pretty tactile - in fact more so than Topres. At some point it does become semantics.
Those who've used the 55g have noticed that they tend to bottom out a little more, compared to the lighter form like the 45g.
Similar to the mx brown; some including myself don't really feel the bump much. I mean it's there but kinda requires the right amount of force. So with the 55 the extra 10 grams of force does add up. I think even majestouch himself when he used the 55g mentioned something similar occurring for him at times.
very interesting... this means there are essentially two classes of switches:
Tactile, where a bump always indicates switch actuation
Non-tactile, where switch actuation is not necessarily correlated with a bump
Tactile = BS, Topre
Non-tactile = ordinary rubber dome, linear
Tactile under usual typing conditions, but not always in extreme cases (i.e., gaming): most alps & cherry
I disagree. "tactile" and "clicky" have always referred to the type of feedback provided when the key is actuated. There are plenty of non-linear keyboards that aren't considered to provide tactile nor audible feedback.
cnet never mentioned tactile
http://reviews.cnet.com/keyboards/realforce-103ub-55g-black/4505-3134_7-34426331.html (http://reviews.cnet.com/keyboards/realforce-103ub-55g-black/4505-3134_7-34426331.html)
and got a 3/5 star.
of course the basic argument is 350$ and no usb hub?
you can overanalyze this crap to death
It's a good point that even on "tactile mechanical" keyboards you can pass the tactile point without actuating (barely) and one I at least hadn't really realized, despite having looked at the force diagrams. I'd still say that the actuation feedback is at least "tightly coupled" to the actuation itself in cherries and it seems like in topres too, versus most rubber domes where the major switch tactile bump is *well* above actuation (switch bottom). If you try to type on a rubber dome the way you would on cherry browns without bottoming out, you'll get no keystrokes, and it's much easier to do at normal typing speed on many rubber domes (that I've tried anyway) than it is to actuate a cherry without making a keypress, to me at least.The design goal is to provide that feedback as near the actuation point as possible. For all practical purposes, they should be the same to users during normal typing activities. I think Cherry and Topre are pretty good (and, as mentioned before, BS is pretty much perfect due to the design). Alps are probably the worst offenders for switches that are designed for tactile feedback.
Alps are probably the worst offenders
The design goal is to provide that feedback as near the actuation point as possible.
Who wants to take over the ALPS wiki and figure out if the colors actually mean anything?
some sort of recording device hidden in it so you could witness the ensuing madness
at OCN and then
I wistfully dream of their news coverage. So much better than ours.
iMav: I put the same question to you.
The older Dell Quietkeys from the mid-1990's are good rubber domes. They feel just like brown Cherries except with a larger tactile bump a little earlier in the keystroke.