geekhack
geekhack Community => Keyboards => Topic started by: uhgreen on Mon, 08 February 2016, 20:38:54
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I've always, and still do, say that the IBM Selectric II had the best keyboard ever. I like my Pok3r with MX Blues. They give me a tactile feel and a nice click, but it's not a Selectric II.
When I press a key on my SII there is almost a few centimeters where you don't need any force at all. Then you reach a wall. That's where the key registers. You press down on that and it bottoms out. You get much more than a click when the typeball hits the platen. You also had the feel of a 25lb. machine under the keys. Even the most durable keyboard can't beat that. The hum of the motor. The smell of the oil in a freshly serviced machine.
I don't think any switch can re-create typing on a SII.
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I've always, and still do, say that the IBM Selectric II had the best keyboard ever. I like my Pok3r with MX Blues. They give me a tactile feel and a nice click, but it's not a Selectric II.
When I press a key on my SII there is almost a few centimeters where you don't need any force at all. Then you reach a wall. That's where the key registers. You press down on that and it bottoms out. You get much more than a click when the typeball hits the platen. You also had the feel of a 25lb. machine under the keys. Even the most durable keyboard can't beat that. The hum of the motor. The smell of the oil in a freshly serviced machine.
I don't think any switch can re-create typing on a SII.
I learned to type on selectrics. A beam spring comes closest of anything.
Minus that constant hum of the motor and the whack of the ball putting down type, even a solenoid setup won't recreate that...
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I've always, and still do, say that the IBM Selectric II had the best keyboard ever. I like my Pok3r with MX Blues. They give me a tactile feel and a nice click, but it's not a Selectric II.
When I press a key on my SII there is almost a few centimeters where you don't need any force at all. Then you reach a wall. That's where the key registers. You press down on that and it bottoms out. You get much more than a click when the typeball hits the platen. You also had the feel of a 25lb. machine under the keys. Even the most durable keyboard can't beat that. The hum of the motor. The smell of the oil in a freshly serviced machine.
I don't think any switch can re-create typing on a SII.
I learned to type on selectrics. A beam spring comes closest of anything.
Minus that constant hum of the motor and the whack of the ball putting down type, even a solenoid setup won't recreate that...
A beam spring. Hmmmm... thanks, I'll look into it.
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I've always, and still do, say that the IBM Selectric II had the best keyboard ever. I like my Pok3r with MX Blues. They give me a tactile feel and a nice click, but it's not a Selectric II.
When I press a key on my SII there is almost a few centimeters where you don't need any force at all. Then you reach a wall. That's where the key registers. You press down on that and it bottoms out. You get much more than a click when the typeball hits the platen. You also had the feel of a 25lb. machine under the keys. Even the most durable keyboard can't beat that. The hum of the motor. The smell of the oil in a freshly serviced machine.
I don't think any switch can re-create typing on a SII.
I personally hate typing on a selectic keyboard, at least Selectric I and II. That's mainly because of the Keycaps. I don't like the Keycap profile, it hurts my fingers after a while. They also have no texture. The keyboard is also quite cheaply made. The ABS yellows fast and gets brittle very quickly. If you take a very close took to the dubbleshot legends, almost all of them will have a fine crack in them.
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IBM Selectric is the best. My dad has one.
THWACK THWACK THWACK!
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I've always, and still do, say that the IBM Selectric II had the best keyboard ever. I like my Pok3r with MX Blues. They give me a tactile feel and a nice click, but it's not a Selectric II.
When I press a key on my SII there is almost a few centimeters where you don't need any force at all. Then you reach a wall. That's where the key registers. You press down on that and it bottoms out. You get much more than a click when the typeball hits the platen. You also had the feel of a 25lb. machine under the keys. Even the most durable keyboard can't beat that. The hum of the motor. The smell of the oil in a freshly serviced machine.
I don't think any switch can re-create typing on a SII.
I personally hate typing on a selectic keyboard, at least Selectric I and II. That's mainly because of the Keycaps. I don't like the Keycap profile, it hurts my fingers after a while. They also have no texture. The keyboard is also quite cheaply made. The ABS yellows fast and gets brittle very quickly. If you take a very close took to the dubbleshot legends, almost all of them will have a fine crack in them.
Oh, I love the keycaps on the Selectric. I don't know about cheaply made. All of the Selectrics I've seen have their keycaps in really good condition and they're all about 40 years old
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Nothing says MECHANICAL KEYBOARD like a 1) IBM SELECTRIC ii, 2) IBM Model F.
I learned how to type in high school typing class on a Selectric II. That's where we learned touch typing.
I still miss that "keyboard."
The IBM model F was created to replicate the selectric feel as best as possible.
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The beam spring was created to replicate the selectric feel, right down to the similar keycaps.