I think I managed to pull off an awkwardly difficult feat:
I managed to break both of my Unicomp buckling spring keyboards, each within two years of 10-12 hours/day use.
Both had the spacebar and several keys around it intermittently stop working.
I bottom out my keyboard about 95 percent of the time, and I type really loud on my laptop.
Considering that buckling spring keyboards have the reputation of being indestructible (and I just destroyed two of them, albeit newer models), what should be the expected lifetime of a wasd cherry green board that I just got?
Isn't this proof that buckling spring keyboards are overrated? This is not the first time I have heard of people breaking their buckling spring keyboards.
You can't get super blacks anymore so what else are you gonna do if you love that high resistance key press feel or just hit keys really hard? I don't bottom out on light or heavy switches and buckling springs aren't a completely infallible design, not gonna fanboy about stuff that isn't true.
But I mean is it really fair to be like, this one guy broke some Unicomps, so buckling springs are overrated, when you have Gaterons snapping off at the stems, ALPS requiring spring replacement which I wasn't willing to do... MX don't really break, but if you don't like how any MX really feels (I'm in that club), not much else you can do unless you want to find someone with a stash of super blacks? (would LOVE this for my advantage but i'm not gonna bet on it)
I would say the best option left if someone doesn't wanna redo the springs in a ALPS board, and unicomp isn't sturdy enough, get an AT Model M or Model M, clean it up, get new caps for it or whatever. I've never unboxed a new model m. I don't remember if it was possible for springs to get dislodged during shipping. Could just be unicomp being lazy, but in my experience a lot of people who type hard and love their old IBM boards never heard of one of them dying from this kind of thing. Unicomps dying, they have a 18 month warranty, but after that you're on your own...
Could very well be that even IBM BS could be destroyed from typing too hard and i've just never heard of it. Man I was Super Blacks were still on the market, or that I got a stash while they were around.
One last thought.... really old Apple II's used to have thick rubber pads under the keys to silence them but they also served to add a whole lot more resistance to the already crazy heavy springs. Maybe you can put a rubber pad under the switches to prevent them from wearing out to all the shock.