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Does this keyboard look mechanical to you?

Posted: 21 May 2013, 18:25
by Membraneuser
First post...don't know if it's rude to start asking for help immediately, but...

A guy is selling me this keyboard for about 5 dollars. I'm bidding 30 on it if it turns out to be mechanical (to offer a fair price). He certainly says that it is mechanical, and it is listed as such, but i'm not sure. Is there a definitive way of checking, just by looking at it?



Side-note, my motherboard (P8Z68-V PRO) doesn't have a PS/2 port. What kind of PS/2 to USB adapter am i looking at?

Posted: 21 May 2013, 18:35
by Muirium
Got any clearer pictures? The bag is fairly effective noise layer over the details. Also: the back would likely say more than the front.

Posted: 21 May 2013, 18:38
by Membraneuser
i asked him to provide the details on the back of the keyboard (if there are any) and will get back as soon as i get them. Thanks.

Posted: 21 May 2013, 18:43
by Halvar
Regarding the ps/2-usb converter, have a look at this thread:

http://deskthority.net/keyboards-f2/bes ... t5542.html

Posted: 21 May 2013, 19:01
by Membraneuser
Thank you. Looking at that thread, I have come to believe that 'active' is the key word here. Since i am on a very tight budget, and i don't like the connector costing more than the keyboard itself...would this be an active converter? http://dx.com/p/slim-usb-2-0-to-ps-2-ad ... ongle-1440

Posted: 21 May 2013, 19:25
by Muirium
All PS/2 adapters are "active". There's no other way to do it. Can't say this one will work for you – the keyboard is ISO (the L shape shift that UK and most European keyboards use instead of the American ANSI style) and people said there are sometimes issues with that – but it might. Especially if there's not fancy keys for multimedia controls you care about. Depends if you want to take the gamble.

I had a similar choice re: MIDI keyboards recently. Roland does a £30 USB adapter I knew worked just fine with iPad as well as Macs. But I tried a £3 generic from Amazon instead, guessing I'd just leave it hooked into whatever computer it wound up working with. Turned out just fine, works everywhere, saved 27 quid.

The battle tested PS/2 adapters people linked in that thread are cheap enough I'd go for one of those, for all of 5-10 pounds. Guess 30 quid is on the other side of my threshold.

Posted: 21 May 2013, 19:31
by kbdfr
Membraneuser wrote:First post...don't know if it's rude to start asking for help immediately, but...
It is not, and the mere fact that you considered this could be an issue would heal it if it was :mrgreen:
Welcome to DT!

Posted: 21 May 2013, 19:50
by Membraneuser
Thank you everyone, and thanks kbdfr.

The keyboard is apparantly a BTC 5201.

Posted: 21 May 2013, 19:59
by Gilgam

Posted: 21 May 2013, 20:08
by Membraneuser
Damn...guess that's it for this thread then :P Thank you, all.

Closed...

Posted: 21 May 2013, 21:01
by Findecanor
Whenever the Esc key is 1.5 wide I first look if it is a BTC keyboard.

Posted: 22 May 2013, 04:26
by mbodrov
The 1.5u Esc and also the Power-Sleep-Wake buttons very strongly (let's say 98%) indicate a non-mechanical keyboard. Though there are exceptions (very few), if these two signs are manifested together you can be 99.9% sure it's non-mechanical. I hope this will be useful in your search for a mechanical keyboard.

Posted: 24 May 2013, 15:19
by bhtooefr
Muirium wrote:All PS/2 adapters are "active". There's no other way to do it.
Actually, no, some are just a pin adapter. (Some PS/2 keyboards can also natively speak USB, and those pin adapters set them up for that. They're just like the ones to adapt a USB keyboard to PS/2.)

Posted: 24 May 2013, 15:34
by Muirium
Ah, of course! I forgot about that. Like the reverse of My Intellimouse Explorer: its green USB to PS/2 adapter wouldn't work with other USB mice. The adapter was really just an extender: the conversion between protocols (or native support for them both) took place inside the mouse instead.

Posted: 27 May 2013, 02:52
by Spotty1125
Looks rubberdome to me...