Author Topic: Lazy Lubing  (Read 2397 times)

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Offline saxophone

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Lazy Lubing
« on: Wed, 03 February 2016, 20:32:48 »
 I'm sick of the gritty feel on fresh Cherry switches. They're on a plate mounted setup and I don't have the tools for desoldering. I'm thinking of simply spraying some WD-40 down each switch after pressing down the key and then mashing the key a few times more to spread it out. Has anyone here tried anything similar?

Offline digi

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #1 on: Wed, 03 February 2016, 20:33:13 »
Great idea, that should work well.

Offline nubbinator

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #2 on: Wed, 03 February 2016, 20:36:49 »
Great idea, that should work well.

I hope you're joking.  WD40 would make an absolute mess of it.

Offline HoffmanMyster

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #3 on: Wed, 03 February 2016, 20:38:25 »
Oh god.

Please no.

Offline digi

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #4 on: Wed, 03 February 2016, 20:43:13 »
After you spray WD40 down it, take a soldering iron out and melt the switch stems..

Offline Bucake

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #5 on: Thu, 04 February 2016, 00:16:56 »
After you spray WD40 down it, take a soldering iron out and melt the switch stems..

set the keyboard on fire for maximum effect

i threw mine in a volcano but not everyone has the luxury of knowing where to find one
IBM Model F XT // Realforce 87U 55g Type-S // HHKBP2 45g Type-S // KBT Pure Pro Cherry MX Red

Offline fanpeople

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #6 on: Thu, 04 February 2016, 00:31:33 »
fanpeople used WD40...... it was super effective.


I recommend it for all cherry boards.

Offline klennkellon

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #7 on: Thu, 04 February 2016, 00:33:40 »
I recommend using Acetone for lube, personally.

Offline fknraiden

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #8 on: Thu, 04 February 2016, 00:38:57 »
Everyone is being sarcastic cause we all assume you are trolling.
Jokes aside. Don't try this. There isn't any remotely effective way of lubing mx switches without disassembly.

IBM SSK 87'     ReAlForce 55g Silent 10AE

Offline Air tree

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #9 on: Thu, 04 February 2016, 00:41:22 »
I hear butter is a good solution. Just melt a stick and drizzle on each stem and it should leak into the mechanisms.

Good luck!

Offline saxophone

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #10 on: Thu, 04 February 2016, 01:15:31 »
Eh? What would be so bad about it? Is it cause WD-40 bleeds everywhere?

I've used it before for repairing broken mousewheels that would jump 2 steps or 1 step in the reverse during use - just open op the mouse, spray some at the part that holds up the mousewheel and it's working as new. Not seeing how it'd be terrible on keyboards. :confused:

Offline nubbinator

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #11 on: Thu, 04 February 2016, 01:21:43 »
WD-40 is primarily a water displacer and solvent with a small mix of lubricants.  In other words, it's mainly for cleaning stuff.  Over time it becomes gummy and nasty not to mention the fact that it is a very poor lubricant before that.

Offline vanwinkey

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #12 on: Thu, 04 February 2016, 13:26:00 »
Eh? What would be so bad about it? Is it cause WD-40 bleeds everywhere?

I've used it before for repairing broken mousewheels that would jump 2 steps or 1 step in the reverse during use - just open op the mouse, spray some at the part that holds up the mousewheel and it's working as new. Not seeing how it'd be terrible on keyboards. :confused:

Get a IBM.

No lube needed.

Offline Nonmouse

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Re: Lazy Lubing
« Reply #13 on: Fri, 05 February 2016, 00:08:29 »
A silicone spray lubricant, or a liquid silicone lube dripped down the stem, might help, and probably wouldn't just frag/gum up the switches to unusability like WD40 would.  There's a long how-to thread on lubing MX switches, with lots of opinions, here that you might want to take a gander at.  If you're going to try and half-ass it, I'd try it out on a key you don't use regularly, like Scroll lock or somesuch, first...