Author Topic: Chery MX Clear  (Read 3075 times)

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Offline patrickgeekhack

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Chery MX Clear
« on: Mon, 19 December 2011, 00:01:12 »
While talking to my uncle today, I notice a keyboard in his pile of junk which turned out to be a Cherry MX clear keyboard. The keys feel heavy like Cherry MX black, and the cord needs to be replaced because the pins are bent. I am wondering if my fingers will be tired pretty quick with this keyboard.
Cherry MX Blue: Cherry G80-3000, Das Keyboard Model S Ultimate
Cherry MX Brown: Filco Majestouch, Compaq MX11800
ALPS: AEK, AEK II, Northgate Omnikey Ultra, Matias Tactile Pro 4
Topre: Realforce 103UB
Buckling Spring: IBM Model M 1390120
Previous owned: Unicomp Customizer 104, IBM Model M 1390141, ABS M1

Offline Artillery

  • Posts: 15
Chery MX Clear
« Reply #1 on: Mon, 19 December 2011, 00:19:10 »
In my experience with my Deck Legend, no.  They take a lot of force to bottom out, but not nearly as much to actuate.  You get used to it pretty quick.

On the other hand though my fingers don't get tired on buckling spring either, while they do get tired on rubber dome.
Current Keyboard: Deck Legend Ice (Tactile) with Cherry Clear switches

Offline Findecanor

  • Posts: 5086
  • Location: Koriko
Chery MX Clear
« Reply #2 on: Mon, 19 December 2011, 07:47:11 »
My fingers get tired more easily on my 45 g Topre than on my 60 g Cherry Clear.
When you have learned to not bottom out on the Clears, then they are very comfortable to type on.
🍉

Offline patrickgeekhack

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  • Posts: 1460
Chery MX Clear
« Reply #3 on: Mon, 19 December 2011, 11:17:41 »
Thank you for you input.
Cherry MX Blue: Cherry G80-3000, Das Keyboard Model S Ultimate
Cherry MX Brown: Filco Majestouch, Compaq MX11800
ALPS: AEK, AEK II, Northgate Omnikey Ultra, Matias Tactile Pro 4
Topre: Realforce 103UB
Buckling Spring: IBM Model M 1390120
Previous owned: Unicomp Customizer 104, IBM Model M 1390141, ABS M1

Offline RiGS

  • Posts: 1594
Chery MX Clear
« Reply #4 on: Mon, 19 December 2011, 12:02:51 »
Quote from: Findecanor;473679
My fingers get tired more easily on my 45 g Topre than on my 60 g Cherry Clear.
When you have learned to not bottom out on the Clears, then they are very comfortable to type on.

Lol, same for me. I wish topre had a stronger spring to prevent bottoming out.
Last edited by RiGS; Jan 2011

Offline Gerk

  • Posts: 448
Chery MX Clear
« Reply #5 on: Mon, 19 December 2011, 23:31:52 »
Quote from: ripster;473949
And ditch the DIP switches.  Too Retro Hipster.


DIP switches might be retro hipster but I'll take a DIP switch over a software option any day.  Don't have to update or reinstall your DIP switches when you update your OS or change to another machine.
Rosewill RK-9000RE (reds) | Das Keyboard Model S Professional Silent (browns) | Leopold TKL (browns) | F21-7D "Mechanical Keyboard" (Blue Alps) | Filco Majestouch TKL (blues) | Goldtouch V2 x 2 | Matias Ergo Pro x 2 | Kinesis Freestyle Pro (browns) | Kinesis Freestyle Edge (reds)

Offline IvanIvanovich

  • Mr. Silk Underwear
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  • Location: USA
Chery MX Clear
« Reply #6 on: Tue, 20 December 2011, 19:51:06 »
Well they are heavy, and use the same spring as black but do not seem as tiresome to me. The tactile bump is so obvious that I MUST stop there as I mistake it as bottoming out. So for me they are not so bad, and I get more fatigue from blues as I seem to always bottom them out hard for some reason.
Ironically reds are my daily and I almost never bottom out on them... go figure.

Offline Clickey

  • Posts: 337
Chery MX Clear
« Reply #7 on: Tue, 20 December 2011, 21:24:47 »
I got tired fingers very quick on MX clears. Would not recommend.
"we are on Geekhack not Lazy****" - The Solutor

Offline keyboardlover

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  • Hey Paul Walker, Click It or Ticket!
    • http://www.keyboardlover.com
Chery MX Clear
« Reply #8 on: Wed, 21 December 2011, 07:06:19 »
Depends on your fingers and how you type - like every switch.

Offline N8N

  • Posts: 795
Chery MX Clear
« Reply #9 on: Wed, 21 December 2011, 07:26:26 »
I'd personally go ahead and fix the board; even if you don't like the clear switches there's plenty of people who do (like me) and they are not an easy switch to find here in the US.  If nothing else you can sell the board and someone might just want to harvest the stems and springs from it.
Filco Majestouch-2 with Cherry Corp. doubleshot keys - Leopold Tenkeyless Tactile Force with Wyse doubleshots - Silicon Graphics 9500900 - WASD V1 - IBM Model M 52G9658 - Noppoo Choc Pro with Cherry lasered PBT keycaps - Wyse 900866-01 - Cherry G80-8200LPBUS/07 - Dell AT101W - several Cherry G81s (future doubleshot donors) (order of current preference) (dang I have too many keyboards, I really only need two)

Offline patrickgeekhack

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  • Posts: 1460
Chery MX Clear
« Reply #10 on: Wed, 21 December 2011, 08:11:43 »
Quote from: N8N;475100
I'd personally go ahead and fix the board; even if you don't like the clear switches there's plenty of people who do (like me) and they are not an easy switch to find here in the US.  If nothing else you can sell the board and someone might just want to harvest the stems and springs from it.
I guess the keyboard is worth a try, just to know. I will repair the board, but I need to find a PS/2 cable of the right thickness. I think I have found one already. I will report back once it's in working condition. I can only tackle one small project at a time between school terms. I am currently cleaning an AEK which was sitting in a corner for almost 7 months.
Cherry MX Blue: Cherry G80-3000, Das Keyboard Model S Ultimate
Cherry MX Brown: Filco Majestouch, Compaq MX11800
ALPS: AEK, AEK II, Northgate Omnikey Ultra, Matias Tactile Pro 4
Topre: Realforce 103UB
Buckling Spring: IBM Model M 1390120
Previous owned: Unicomp Customizer 104, IBM Model M 1390141, ABS M1