I'm on an M10 a member here loaned me for a couple weeks so I can try out the blue switches. I've actually owned one of these before but I messed it up before I really got a good feel for the switches and I threw it away. Temper temper.
So now here I am, all grown up and trying this switch again. It's been only two days, but so far so far so good. I was already able to write fiction on it last night, and that is a first: I never write fiction on keyboards on the first day, the first week, sometimes never. I ended up writing way over my standard 2000 on this M10 and I really like the blues. This keyboard is NOT for me, it's too damn big, but a Filco or DSI mini with blue switches would be perfect.
These switches are the lightest of the clickies by far and the noise is higher pitched than the others, but in a way it sounds more like a mechanical typewriter, which for me is a huge plus. Another plus is that, even though this is not he most solidly constructed keyboard, these blues are quiet compared to the white Alps switches but still loud enough.
I'm gonna type only on this keyboard for the entire two weeks, and I think i am going to really want a Filco tenkeyless with Cherry blues in the very near future. If I have trouble getting that one, then I might just go for the DSI. As it turns out, those big wings on the sides of that keyboard would make it fit on me desk better, but the Filco is cooler.
So at the end of the day, I got out all my main keyboards and dry-typed on them to see how I felt about each one, and the results surprised me. First I got out the MK96 — The Alps felt a lot tougher to push and more snappy, plus I bottomed out way more than on the blues. Just loud as f*ck. Then I got out my Model M — too plasticy feeling, not enough action or life in the keys. The AT101 — no matter what, I always hate how this keyboard feels like it stops the stroke early (I think we can all agree this sucks ...) so I didn't like it either.
So of all the keyboards above, I didn't like any of them right away after the Cherry blues. Then, for my last trick, I got out the Topre 86. I figured I would think it sucked like the rest but then I typed on it and it felt sooooo good! Just like typing on pillows in the clouds. I can go back and forth with any clicky keyboard and the Topre because the feels, while completely different, seem to compliment each other somehow. The Topre 86 just rocks, nothing else to it but that. Worth every penny.
So for now, I am thinking I need two main keyboards for my final writing rotation — the Topre 86 and the Filco tenkeyless with Cherry blues. I'll always keep a Model M, but it will always be stored under my MK96.