Shed some light on this topic please, I'd be curious to find out

Pretty much this. Also considering the fact that buckling spring is generally only a specific type of switch. A loud and clicky switch with a static actuation force and weighting. Compare that to MX which can come in the form of tactile and linear as well as clicky.zrrion wrote: 19 May 2020, 06:16 The patent expired on the original design so anyone can make them, no rights required.
[...]
but even then they still aren't in the same league as MX, its just that they aren't competing with MX. A modern BS switch would be competing though and no one really wants the risk associated with direct competition.
It's a shame cherry is the standard, their switches feel awful. To be honest, I reckon some manufacturer could get away with it. Worst case, they'd probably have to shrink down the design of the beams and fine tune the springs. Even then, I still think someone could get away with having them that tall. It's not like a lot of keyboards nowadays are innocent of having chunky designs with deep housings.zrrion wrote: 19 May 2020, 06:16 The patent expired on the original design so anyone can make them, no rights required.
That said, the reason you don't see it in modern switches is because the design is taller than you have room for in a cherry compatible switch. New designs have to be as low risk, and the easiest way for them to be low risk is for them to be compatible with the existing MX ecosystem. As I understand it buckling springs are a fine tuned operation and have height requirements that would make them too tall for the existing MX "standard." Deviation from the MX standard involves more upfront tooling cost and a higher barrier to adoption of the switch, which ends up being more risk than manufacturers care to take.
The only folks making non-MX stuff right now are either folks who already had the tooling, were able to crowdfund the startup needed to make the tooling, or are logitech with their romer g switches and I suspect logitech went with romer g because they are cheaper and logitech is a big enough name that they could force romer g to be a thing with market presence through their own existing market presence.
Neither the in production ALPS clones nor Unicomp have a lot of market presence should be a testament to how difficult it is to exist outside of the MX market, Logitech is only able to do it because they're a huge name brand and logitech still isn't doing all that well at it tbh. The exception to this is choc switches which fill a niche that MX can't fill and so the lack of ecosystem compatibility is unavoidable, but even then they still aren't in the same league as MX, its just that they aren't competing with MX. A modern BS switch would be competing though and no one really wants the risk associated with direct competition.
Well, let's crowd fund it. I have faith in you!XMIT wrote: 19 May 2020, 19:31 You rang?
The manufacturer of my boards went out of business. So to make a new offering I need to start from scratch. It's a chance to get a lot of things right! But don't hold your breath...
That's very kind. Let me get a design and a working prototype together and we'll see how things go.funkmon wrote: 20 May 2020, 00:47Well, let's crowd fund it. I have faith in you!XMIT wrote: 19 May 2020, 19:31 You rang?
The manufacturer of my boards went out of business. So to make a new offering I need to start from scratch. It's a chance to get a lot of things right! But don't hold your breath...
Noble company. Each success builds on such failures. As master Yoda said, "the greatest teacher, failure is." I think Edison would agreeXMIT wrote: 21 May 2020, 17:48That's very kind. Let me get a design and a working prototype together and we'll see how things go.funkmon wrote: 20 May 2020, 00:47Well, let's crowd fund it. I have faith in you!XMIT wrote: 19 May 2020, 19:31 You rang?
The manufacturer of my boards went out of business. So to make a new offering I need to start from scratch. It's a chance to get a lot of things right! But don't hold your breath...
The hallways of the DT archives are littered with the bodies of failed and abandoned projects. rsbseb's SBS key caps, lot_lizard's Model F boards, phosphorglow's Colossus and the recent Alps SKCM Blue work by abrahamstechnology are the ones I can rattle off from the top of my head. The successes are fewer and further between: Ellipse's F62/F77, some of the I:C offerings, Chyros's video reviews. It takes time, dedication, consistency, and grit as much as luck and money to get these things going.
But you're right, I should stop making excuses and start making keyboards, it's been long enough.