Over a year ago I acquired a Zenith ZKB-2 with green alps from a friend in exchange for a helping him set up his new computer. See
this thread.
It seems that many of these green Alps endowed Zenith's end their lives as donor boards once a GH member gets ahold of them. Part of me is leaning that way. The other half is a bit charmed by this keyboard and its internal speaker chirping away as you type. While my subconscious battles over its final fate, I decided I would have at it with some Retr0Brite and see what happens. If the results are bad, its a donor...if there good, the decision remains difficult.
The ProcessI decided to go with a liquid approach instead of paste/gel. H
2O
2 is relatively cheap and the case is thin, so submerging it in liquid shouldn't be too difficult. I went to Sally and picked up some developer for about $10. I already had some oxy clean at home. I got a gallon on 20 volume and a liter of 40 volume which combined yield about a 7% solution, which is a little lower than recommended, but should work.

I have a UV exposure unit I built previously to expose photosensitive PCB material. I put the retr0brite in a plastic container in the bathtub ( in case of disaster ) and then placed the UV above.


The case took about 5 hours. When it was finished, I put the key caps in the remaining solution. The keycaps sink when turned over. I placed the container on some boxes and put the underneath.

The key caps to much longer, but the solution had probably lost strength due to the breakdown of the H
2O
2.
ResultsThe Case:
Here are some photos of the case before. The inside color is probably the original color. Note the build markings with a date of 87-09-23. Who knew Borg Warner made keyboard cases?



After

Its still slightly yellowed, but close to original.
The Key Caps
Before

After
Issues:There results weren't perfect.
The Zenith logo on the dip switch cover was silver originally. The Retr0Brite removed the silver color. I can paint it back. Curiously, the silver on the "data systems" remained.

The white key caps still show some yellowing, while some of the grey key caps suffer from some white bloom; noteably the "+" key on the numpad.

Doing it again, I would do the different color keys as separate batches and use fresh solution for each.
Conclusion:Overall, I happy with the results. Its not perfect, but its much better than it was. Will it become a donor board? Not right now, but should I find I really need (want) to build a green Alps board....well, maybe