Seller says it came with a 486 computer


No logo in front; different prints on the back.
Is it a buckling spring model M?
It even has a non-stepped CapsLock keycap. Good catch.koralatov wrote:On the plus-side, it has double-shot Cherry caps, so you shouldn’t have any problems selling them on.
They could be mounted upside down, but then again, it doesn't look like there's "Cherry" printed on those.RC-1140 wrote:as nobody else has said it, and you apparently don't know: these look like platemounted Cherry MX Blacks. But they look like clones. Real Cherry MX switches would have the Cherry Logo on top of the casing, and an opening, in which a jumper wire, or a diode is placed.
I already posted a question in that thread, thanks.JBert wrote:That's something you'd normally ask in the How much is my ____ worth? thread in the marketplace...
Quite frankly, I don't have any idea. You might check what the unstepped caps lock key looks like on the underside to see if it fits a modern keyboard, but that "bigass" enter key likely won't fit anywhere.
So sad. I wish it was a real Model F/M/any IBM kb.if it was real ANSI i would take it off you but the model F AT style enter and esc is a bit of a pain
It might have been country of origin. These days, anyway, many of the mechanicals with the large Enter keys come out of Taiwan (IIRC). It might have been the same thing back then. Many of the older, mechanical keyboards with large Enter keys were all ALPS-based.leoblack9 wrote:And I'm quite curious why there weren't that many mechanical keyboards that have those huge enter keys, as most rubber domes I've had all had huge enter keys.