Hello,
First of all, english isn't my mother tongue, so I apologize for the upcoming mistakes.
I recently decided to custom my old steelseries 6gv2 mechanical keyboard. I bought a bunch of switches, and then i started to desolder the old Cherry MX black to solder my brand new switches. After everything was done, I noticed that some keys were not working: F5, Left Control key, and the break key (that I don't often use, but still). I started to think that I did some bad soldering, or even that the switches were not working, so I desoldered, swaped switches, resoldered, and keys still didn't work. So I finally put it on the PCB. I checked on the internet, and some people seem to "bridge" a pin of a not-working key with an other one, by column of by raw (I didn't really understand this part ...), by making contact with a conductive material just like in this video I checked
.
So I tried myself, and yes, something is happening when I make contact with a pin of a not-working key with a nearby pin of another key, but when I make contact while I'm on a keyboard tester, it seems a "random" key is triggered in place of the key I want. For example, when I make contact between my broken-F5 and F6, it seems to trigger the "3" key. For the break key, it triggers the "9" key when I make contact with a Scroll Lock's pin...
Is there any way to find the bridge I have to create to trigger the correct key ? I'm totally new to keyboard modding, and eletronic in general ... so I'm asking for some help.
Best regards,
LM