Did you check to see if the solder joint on the switch is ok?
I noticed the switch moves back and forth more than the other ones but only slightly.
What do you mean by solder joint? Is there a picture I can take to help diagnose this problem more efficiently?
The leaf in the housing could be damaged. Try adjusting it (without breaking the switch!) and see if that makes it more reliable.
Have you tried replacing the stem?
Edit: When you say the switch moves back and forth, do you mean the whole housing unit or just the upper half?
Dude that leaf looks jacked uuuuuuuup. Yes, the keys register when the leaf is disrupted by the stem. So if it's jacked up and the stem can't disrupt it then you will not have a registered key. My guess is that with the leaf that messed up you don't hear a click either.
You will have to find a way to carefully bend it back in place (my hands cannot do that :() or you will have to desolder and replace the switch housing.
Dude that leaf looks jacked uuuuuuuup. Yes, the keys register when the leaf is disrupted by the stem. So if it's jacked up and the stem can't disrupt it then you will not have a registered key. My guess is that with the leaf that messed up you don't hear a click either.
You will have to find a way to carefully bend it back in place (my hands cannot do that :() or you will have to desolder and replace the switch housing.
Wow, learn something new every day.
It does click but very faintly. I bought this keyboard used and I'm the second owner. I can't imagine how it would get like that with the top part on...
I tried to bend it but it's not wanting to go back. I don't want to apply too much force. What if I took a rubber band or yarn and put it between the leaf? It would still be squishy but be pushed up far enough.
If I end up not doing that what is the approx worth on the keyboard?
Dude that leaf looks jacked uuuuuuuup. Yes, the keys register when the leaf is disrupted by the stem. So if it's jacked up and the stem can't disrupt it then you will not have a registered key. My guess is that with the leaf that messed up you don't hear a click either.
You will have to find a way to carefully bend it back in place (my hands cannot do that :() or you will have to desolder and replace the switch housing.
Wow, learn something new every day.
It does click but very faintly. I bought this keyboard used and I'm the second owner. I can't imagine how it would get like that with the top part on...
I tried to bend it but it's not wanting to go back. I don't want to apply too much force. What if I took a rubber band or yarn and put it between the leaf? It would still be squishy but be pushed up far enough.
If I end up not doing that what is the approx worth on the keyboard?
Keyboard loses no value from that switch being broken. The solder hasn't been touched and its really just a bad lower housing for 1 switch. If you had it here it would literally take me 5 minutes tops to replace (iron has to heat up, yo).
Anyone with a decent soldering iron can fix that super easy. Maybe you'd have to re-imburse then the cost of a white switch? Less than a dollar + shipping?