It is a cool historic keyboard and I had to have this. This is the first keyboard I bought that didn't have a computer or terminal attached
Here's the keyboard pics.
Thanks seebart. When you collect vintage computers, a collection of vintage keyboards kinda comes with it and I'm not even close to finishedseebart wrote: ↑You continue to baffle me on a daily basis with your vintage keyboards now snuci! Not too many people here have a collection to do that! Apparently you do. Anyway, I don't own an IBM Beamspring, but that switch looks different IMO. Possibly Clare Pendar yes. The keyboard is nice but that PCB is awesome!
I think this is the one. I don't exactly recall but I believe this person had it on Craigslist for a while first (where I initially contacted her) and then I saw it posted on eBay but we made a deal outside of eBay.XMIT wrote: ↑snuci where did you get this board? I missed an auction on one maybe a few months ago. Did you pick up that one? It would have shipped from New Mexico.
It just occurred to me that with the picture of the PCB, it has screws on the bottom like foam and foil. I will take it apart and take a picture. If MUST b foam and foil but it doesn't feel like it. I have an Apple Lisa and a TRS-80 model II with Keytronic foam and foil switches and I've had to replace the foam on those. I'll check it later tonight.XMIT wrote: ↑Hmm, I don't know what type of key switch this is. Can you post a photo of the underside of the slider, specifically, the slider PCB interface? It looks like this could be some sort of foam and foil board. The pad arrangement looks like it would support capacitive or conductive sensing.
I will never see it work unfortunately unless I find an Ampex Dialogue 80 terminal. This would also normally be branded "Cray Research Inc" but if I found the normal Ampex branded one, I wouldn't complain. Here's some info: http://terminals.classiccmp.org/wiki/in ... ialogue_80Chyros wrote: ↑Looks somewhat elaborate to me, but I guess it should work.