I have a bag of 62g springs that I have no intention on using. Shoot me a pm and i'll send them out to you on monday.
Wait. How many grams are the Cherry MX blue, brown, and red switches? I'd guess they were 45grams. Right?
62g is the Korean weight that is supposed to be similar to what red/blue/brown switches are. They are the springs that most people use when going to ergo-clears, instead of taking from new switches.
How many grams does an MX Clear have?
In Cherry or Korean measurements?
The Cherry measurement is around 65g at actuation, IIRC -- compare this number to the 45g you would see in a MX blue.
The equivalent in Korean springs, at bottom out, would be closer to 78g or 80g -- compare this number to the 62g of a purple Zealio, and not to the 45g of the MX blue.
But note that not all springs have the same force curve, so two springs that are 78g at bottom out will not necessarily have the same actuation force.
Thanks. How can I convert the two measurments? Is 62G in Korean the same as 45G in Cherry?
Also, what measurement is this site using? https://mechanicalkeyboards.com/shop/index.php?l=product_list&c=47
As said in this site: https://mechanicalkeyboards.com/shop/index.php?l=product_detail&p=1350
"These springs are custom-made and each compression force has its special properties:
The 35g requires an extremely light touch and has a similar response to Topre
The 40g come a hair lighter than Red and Brown switches to better suit faster typists
The 45g is comparable to Red and Brown
The 60g comes close to Black, which gives you a tactile response and a slightly lighter compression force than Clears
The 62g is an immensely popular weight that proves particularly useful for Ergo Clear mods
The 67g comes close to Extra Ergo Clears and is a touch heavier than standard Clears
The 80g features the Green and Grey weight and proves most useful for intentional typists"
I thought Ergo Clears consisted of springs (62G) from Red/Brown switches yet the Red/Brown switch springs are compared to 45G.
red/brown/blue MX all use essentially the same spring. This spring has an actuation force of around 45g. Most Korean springs that approximate this same spring require a force of 60g to bottom out, and are sold as 60g springs. For ergo clears, you want a slightly stronger spring to prevent the large tactile bump in the MX clear slider from getting stuck on the upstroke, hence the springs with a 62g bottom out force.
I have no idea how MK is measuring their spring weights. That might be a good question to ask them. Based on what is written, it looks like there's a mixture of measurements at bottom out and actuation. As I say, it depends entirely who you get your measurements from, and which physical springs are being measured.
If I was guessing, I would say from the descriptions that all of the MK springs are measured at actuation, except for their 62g and 80g. By a rough conversion, the 62g would be closer to a 46g or 47g spring at actuation, and the 80g would be close to a 65g at actuation (although with different force curves). This would mean that the 62g spring is actually lighter than the 60g spring, and the 80g spring is actually lighter than the 67g spring. (Although I must emphasize that this is guesswork.)
The two different systems make it quite difficult for us as enthusiasts to talk about springs. It's made even more complicated by the fact that Korean springs from different manufacturers will have somewhat different properties, even within the same weight. All the properties of a spring can't really be boiled down to one number, particularly when people use multiple different reference points (actuation force vs. bottom out force).
In the end, if you want ergo clears, you want something slightly heavier than the stock spring in a blue/red/brown. What exactly that gets called depends on who you buy it from.