Hi everyone,
I've been lurking here for a couple weeks slowly driving myself insane on which mechanical keyboard to get and I've decided to join the club.
I'm down to purchasing a FILCO TenKeyLess but I can't make up my mind on Blue or Brown Switches. I've read all the threads, posts and wikis about it and I've watched several Youtube videos more times than I'd like to admit.
What is important to me is that my fingers feel what they are actually doing. That is if I feel on my finger an increase in resistance and then a sudden drop, I would like to think that I've activated something at this moment.
Let's take a look at
a chart I've found on elitekeyboards.com:
The red lines indicate what I like to call "dead-zones". That is areas after a perceived peak in resistance but before actual switch activation on a downstroke (I hope I am understanding these charts correctly).
So the Brown switches have a first hump at just under 60g of pressure followed by a second subtle hump just under 50g of pressure. The first hump which is the far more noticeable is just sensory and actually actuates nothing. The second hump will be practically unnoticeable at normal typing speeds. Only on the second hump does the switch actually activate. So me as a user I would perceive a deadzone from the top of the first hump to the top of the second hump which is about 0.8mm of travel until the switch would actually fire if I pushed down the key slowly. I would feel something happening but nothing would until a slight moment later. The key would feel kind of lazy if I had to describe it in one word.
Now the Blue switches have one hump only. It is a sharp increase of resistance to about 60g of pressure and then a sudden drop which ends with switch activation immediately. So my finger would feel a switch and have it actually activate almost immediately unlike the browns. The sensory feedback seems more precise in this case. To my finger this switch would feel responsive if I had to describe it in one word.
This also brings up the point of everyone saying that the brown switches have an activation point of 45g and the blues having an activation point of 50g. While this is true, I don't think it's what really matters. To my fingers, this wouldn't matter because I would feel the resistance of about 60g on both switches and then a sudden drop where my finger would quickly accelerate down and activate the switch even if a slight increase of 1g or 2g in resistance is still coming. My finger would just blow right through it.
So all that's left to compare is the distance traveled by the key from perceived activation (~60g) and actual activation of the key (~45g or ~50g) in which case the Brown switches have a much bigger gap (aka deadzone) than the blues.
Am I making any sense? Am I interpreting these charts correctly? Have I gone mad?