Three-leg switches
Posted: 04 Jan 2013, 19:19
It's well-known that some switches have three legs, but I never gave any thought to why. Here's a KPT keyboard with three-leg switches:
http://kbtalking.cool3c.com/article/13939
Notice how all three legs have separate traces. No leg is connected to any other leg on the same switch.
It looks to me as though they're increasing the rollover by probing switches from multiple angles. i.e. instead of putting diodes onto the PCB, they've put two probe lines on each switch. (Some switches do only have two legs soldered.)
Incidentally, he's got that down a 1984 keyboard, but the FCC claim it was registered in 1991. That's more than a small discrepancy!
http://kbtalking.cool3c.com/article/13939
Notice how all three legs have separate traces. No leg is connected to any other leg on the same switch.
It looks to me as though they're increasing the rollover by probing switches from multiple angles. i.e. instead of putting diodes onto the PCB, they've put two probe lines on each switch. (Some switches do only have two legs soldered.)
Incidentally, he's got that down a 1984 keyboard, but the FCC claim it was registered in 1991. That's more than a small discrepancy!