I didn't know about this issue. The whites I have in my YOTH seem pretty uniform. I'm not as big a fan as I thought I would be, whites feel very linear underneath the click, and they also feel a lot lighter than you would expect.
MX blues and MX greens are ALSO linear under their click. It's how the spring is designed.
MX milk whites are sometimes called "albinio greens." The tactile feel and actuation are almost identical. Just the feel of the actuation bump and click itself are a bit different.
it sounds like you want "MX click greys" if you want the switch to not have a "linear" feel under the click. Am I correct that you want the resistance to INCREASE under the click as you bottom out?
Ifi you want the click : Try these:
http://deskthority.net/wiki/Cherry_MX_Click_Grey
You can also try the more common (but still rare) tactile greys. At least you can find them in some keyboards (Vortex and some others), while you would have to get a click grey board most likely made by yourself--if you can even find the switch.
Sorry, what I mean by that, is that there isn't a very distinctive tactile bump where the click is. With blues and greens, there is distinctive feedback along with the click. But with whites, I don't feel like there is any tactility, or any sort of feedback, other than the click. That's what I meant by linear behind the click.
I don't want it to increase, I was just hoping for something behind the click.
I would say after using both whites and greens, they are very very different. Admittedly I have a Granite set on my greens, and stock caps on my whites, but I don't think that would make that much of a difference.
I have just had a load of tactile greys transplanted into my Keycool (in my signature) and I've been using it for about a week and a bit, and I do like them. But I think I'm going to swap back to my V60 with greens because I think I like them more... I have so many switches to choose from and I actually like them all a lot =/