How to Replace Laptop Keyboard with Cherry ML Switches?

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ماء

24 May 2013, 04:51

I now use laptop chiclet keyboard and easily damaged if exposed to dust: cry:
The example
Image
THANKS before
Last edited by ماء on 06 Jul 2013, 17:30, edited 3 times in total.

dondy

24 May 2013, 10:30

are you sure you could fit them in there without hitting the screen when closed?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiclet_keyboard

this looks like it's a *really* thin build, so ml switches and keycaps would easily be higher than that.

i never had problems with dust in the keyboard - usually have more of a problem with dust fucking up the ventilation D:

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Muirium
µ

24 May 2013, 11:46

Yeah, I don't think you'll have any luck with this.

Instead: put the laptop on a stand and plug in whatever real keyboard you like.

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ماء

24 May 2013, 15:22

I' m find
Image

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Muirium
µ

24 May 2013, 15:27

I don't know why your pictures never seem to show up using img /img tags here, ماء. But you found a good one!

http://kkcdn-static.kaskus.co.id/images ... 052011.jpg

Laptops used to be a tiny little but chunkier, back in the day. I don't know how a manufacturer could get away with integrating a real keyboard now.

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ماء

24 May 2013, 15:36

it is a laptop lexmark long they made ​​it a little thicker
http://www.sieler.com/lexbook/lb10.jpg
you know What you live in his time?
but now they do not make anymore

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Muirium
µ

24 May 2013, 15:48

My first real computer was a laptop I got in 1997, back when they all still looked much like that. No USB, no optical drive and no built in networking. Pretty useless in a modern sense. Especially once I wore the floppy drive out!

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ماء

24 May 2013, 15:57

do you still have them picture
here many older laptops may be one of them ml switch
http://pcequip.com/index.php?cPath=72&o ... e03c029ed0

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bhtooefr

24 May 2013, 16:01

You could put a real keyboard in a modern (well, not MacBook Air thin, but modern ~1" thick business machine thick) laptop, but you'd have some serious compromises as far as capability.

To have the keyboard in the modern position, you'd have a very deep laptop - this would basically mandate a 4:3 screen, and the keyboard wouldn't be pushed all the way back to the screen like laptops have been since the first PowerBooks, it'd be a couple inches away.

Then, you'd have the hard drive and battery at the front, and the motherboard at the rear, with the keyboard carrying the SATA and power between the motherboard and those devices.

And, for a ~14" laptop, you'd need a TINY motherboard - think on the order of a MacBook Pro Retina 13" board - so forget about discrete graphics. RAM actually could stay socketed, because that means it can be stacked, reducing depth, though.

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ماء

24 May 2013, 16:09

powerbook is thick,macbook is thin :lol:
Nice thick or thin bhotder?

but macbook should be better :D
Last edited by ماء on 24 May 2013, 16:20, edited 2 times in total.

dondy

24 May 2013, 16:11

you could try to buy a old laptop for it's casing and try to fit a touchpad and a keyboard (cherry g84 - or are there other cherry ml kb?) in it... that sounds like a tough job though...

esp. because touchpads exceed usual old-laptop-screen-sizes...

or just build your custom laptop in the old-laptop-casing using something like a raspberry pi - that sounds awfully expensive though... and also annoying to do :D

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ماء

24 May 2013, 16:30

but difficult for older, laptops yes good idea but not easy

Cherry G84 laptop for every measure of how?

dondy

24 May 2013, 17:06

i'm not sure what you mean, if you talk about the measurements of the keyboard - that's hard to tell - i don't own one and the measurements on the official cherry site are most likely with the casing it comes in - so you would save a bit if you discard it. i really can't help you with that :(

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ماء

24 May 2013, 17:22

cheery g84 for laptop size(inch)

dondy

24 May 2013, 17:40

http://cherry.de/cid/b2b_keyboards_Comp ... 4-4100.htm? has some information on there... though i think 19 inch application doesn't actually mean the keyboard has a size of 19 inch...

a 19inch laptop is quite a beast to carry around especially with the added weight from the mechanical keyboard xD

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Grond

24 May 2013, 17:45

That refers to 19 inch rack mounts I guess.

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ماء

25 May 2013, 03:35

wow 19inch

davkol

26 May 2013, 20:32

derp
Last edited by davkol on 10 Jan 2025, 19:35, edited 1 time in total.

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Daniel Beardsmore

27 May 2013, 14:21

My G84-4400 is 18 mm high including the case and keycaps. Slim considering how good the switches feel, but laptop keyboards are absurdly thin — thinner than you would imagine possible considering how much travel they have.

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