I have a Leopold fc660M that I spilled coffee on. Not an entire mug but probably a few large sips. I cleaned it with alcohol and a day later replaced the switches that were sticking. A day or two later a few switches were intermittently working. Then the entire home row except for G and H was not working as well as 1 or 2 other switches- backslash and question mark I think. Maybe tab too. I can check again if that info is needed. The felt mat had moisture on it that didn't dry when I assembled it and it screwed it up. I screwed up.
Now what's so special about this board? These are "vintage browns" from 3 years ago and the bump is ever just so slightly detectable. Almost, but not quite a linear. It must be this particular lot cuz any other brown is considerably more clicky. Most people would hate it. It was my favorite board. It was also very quiet. I like them so much I want to transfer them to my new Leopold, also with browns. It just seems a little ridiculous to do so- to put them back into the same model board. I'm using it now. I have 10 boards and I use like 2 of them.
My knowledge of the layout of the PCB is not enough to fix this. There could be one little spot of corrosion which could be scraped and soldered. Or the entire controller could be fudged. Or a short. I do plan on harvesting these switches anyway, but I would love to just fix it. Does someone smarter than me know where the problem lies based on my description? I've manually connected the switch prongs together and wired them to other switches, but could not get them to register in any way. The problem may not even be visible and I don't know what to look for. I haven't disassembled it yet, but I'm definitely keeping the switches. I also didn't clean the underside of the pcb well, but I know there was moisture on the mat so I'm sure that was the problem.
Is it possible to buy the PCB somewhere? That would be easy. I can check for open circuits or see if voltage registeres but I don't know where to look. There are sooo many traces. The fact that it's the home row may mean something. If someone thinks they may be helpful I can desolder all the switches and show both sides of the pcb. I was hoping one day I'd plug it in and it would work again, but that hasn't happened. If you can't help thanks for reading my long post anyway.
I hear there are clueboard pcb's that fit the Leopold case?