Pics by rapster, Filco vs Cherry:


You just made me smile.They are much more solid - Barely any key rattle (especially vertically)
That's only true for pcb mounted keyboards.Nearly indestructible - These do not break. The most common error is the wire snapping out, takes 2 secs to fix.
agreed. I've removed keycaps so many times until even my geekhack key puller broke. It would be much worse if i had a keyboard with Filco stabilizers.sixty wrote:Original Cherry ones are the one in the second pic. The main improvement is that keys do not rattle at all. I never noticed any real change in feel. If you get out the web-wit-o-meter you should get 5g more required force at most.
Why I prefer the Cherry ones:
1) They are much more solid - Barely any key rattle (especially vertically)
2) Nearly indestructible - These do not break. The most common error is the wire snapping out, takes 2 secs to fix. Compare that to Taiwan ones breaking in half - you are fucked.
3) Much better for frequent keycap swapping - It does not take two instructional videos and 20 minutes of work to get a shift key back on.
4) Much more forgiving to differently shaped keycaps. This is quite a big point. The Cherry stabilizers will take pretty much any keycap you throw at them. No matter of the material and stem size. The Taiwan ones are not forgiving at all, since they have to sit very tight in the keycap simply because of the way this design works. Some of the Black Widow spacebars actually have a tiny bit of paper between the stabilizers and the keycap, because they are so demanding for precision.
When selling Filcos Majestouch preferred the lighter action of the Filco style stabilizers.itlnstln wrote:Majestouch had a pretty good post. Nothing new, I suppose, but at he least he added some business perspective.