Reason for mat?

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klikkyklik

11 Aug 2015, 01:56

I restored a keyboard recently that had a paper mat under the keys. What is the purpose of this mat? Is it just to keep gunk out of the PCB, protect against accidental fluid spills, or... any thoughts?

Image

User avatar
Muirium
µ

11 Aug 2015, 02:19

I've seen these in various old non-IBM boards. Flimsy mats that are shaped like a plate would be, but the keyboard itself is PCB mount. I don't know what they're for. They sure are dust magnets!

Perhaps some nonsense to do with radiation emission standards. Bare components could have been frowned upon by the regulators.

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kbdfr
The Tiproman

11 Aug 2015, 08:13

Muirium wrote: […] They sure are dust magnets! […]
That would be a good reason for such a mat: keeping dust from the switches :D

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seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

11 Aug 2015, 08:30

Something like this would make sense on dust prone Alps keyboards.

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Muirium
µ

11 Aug 2015, 12:03

Uh huh? But the switches are exposed through the holes, just like a plate. The boards I've found these in had very dusty switches too.

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seebart
Offtopicthority Instigator

11 Aug 2015, 12:07

Right, so it`s a somewhat pointless measure. Must have some other reason then. Shielding? I don`t think so.

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Muirium
µ

11 Aug 2015, 13:18

As I said:
Muirium wrote: Perhaps some nonsense to do with radiation emission standards. Bare components could have been frowned upon by the regulators.
A lot of engineering isn't to satisfy scientific objectives, but is there to perform legally required hocus pocus. Sad but true.

KRKS

11 Aug 2015, 15:50

Either that or just noise reduction.

Findecanor

11 Aug 2015, 16:04

I think that it is there as fakery, to make it look as if there is a plate when in fact there is none.

Judging by the use of clone switches and not genuine Cherry MX, I would think that this was a relatively cheap keyboard to start with.

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Muirium
µ

11 Aug 2015, 16:26

Ah, noise reduction is possibly the reason. It's always soft stuff.

I've seen these on Mitsumi miniature switch equipped Chicony boards, which are definitely not MX clones, and are so light there's clearly no metal plate. I don't think it's subterfuge. Who would have cared anyway?

User avatar
klikkyklik

11 Aug 2015, 16:38

Findecanor wrote: I think that it is there as fakery, to make it look as if there is a plate when in fact there is none.

Judging by the use of clone switches and not genuine Cherry MX, I would think that this was a relatively cheap keyboard to start with.
Yeah, maybe just an appearance thing...

User avatar
Muirium
µ

11 Aug 2015, 16:40

Well, if "looks like hair and fluff stuck on shit" is your thing, then they sure are pretty!

I've tried cleaning them. Didn't go well. Too weak to bear the firm scrubbing required to release all the spooge. No loss. The keyboard works just as well without.

User avatar
klikkyklik

11 Aug 2015, 16:47

Muirium wrote: Well, if "looks like hair and fluff stuck on shit" is your thing, then they sure are pretty!

I've tried cleaning them. Didn't go well. Too weak to bear the firm scrubbing required to release all the spooge. No loss. The keyboard works just as well without.
That was my conclusion as well; after removal and the board cleaned up, the mat didn't go back in. I still have it, but can't see a use for it (hence this thread).

Thanks for the responses, guys. I'll chalk this up to "who knows?"

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