SKCL Heavy Cream perhaps?
Once more documentation is provided and more discussion on what exactly it is I will be more than happy or make a wiki page. Documenting new switches is wayy more important than individual keyboards.
SKCL Heavy Creams would be my choice as well. However, when putting them alongside SKCM creams damped or undamped, thet are visibly darker. Creams look almost white next to them until you put actual whites alongside as well. I'll try and get a better camera and take some better pics in the next couple of days.
If i were looking to remove heavily soldered bolts from an Omnikey 101, what would be my best bet?
Without damaging the already battered and bruised PCB, preferably
Well, the way i did it is, I first used a soldering iron on top of the bolt to make a piloting hole. I don't know how heavily your bolts are soldered, I had only one soldered on that board, and I've seen bolts with both more and less solder on another one. Anyway, then I used a couple of different burring bits with my dremel to first smooth out all the dremel in the screw head and the screw head itself, and to slowly drill into the head as well. Using 3mm wide bits should cut through the head and leave the rest of the head and solder on PCB and bolt in the nut with just enough peeking out to unscrew it. I don't know if regular drill bits would work. I think if using a dremel, they would maybe break, and if using a regular drill, it might be too heavy and cumbersome. When PCB is separated from the plate when all the bolts are drilled this way, it should be easy to desolder screw heads, as the plate is no longer draining heat from them. I used heat gun, but i think good soldering iron would do as well. The most important thing through the whole process is to be patient. I can't stress that enough. Good luck, and let us know how it goes.
Heat gun just hot enough to loosen the solder a bit, a screwdriver and some elbow grease. Also you can use a drill and just drill out the bolt, but that is more destructive than the method I described.
I also tried using just the heat gun, but the solder just didn't budge.