Most pad printing, isn't, apparently
Posted: 17 Sep 2013, 01:45
Interesting …
http://www.keysourcechina.com/seven-tec ... nting.html
According to this page:
"Pad print is usually used in some high end keyboards"
"Screen printing is the most widely used printing technology in keycap printing. Similar to pad printing, it can also print various colors. To keep the letters from being scratching, uv coating will be added on top of letters."
Then, according to EliteKeyboards:
http://www.elitekeyboards.com/products. ... 104_grn_tw
"Tampo pad printed legends offer better durability than lasered or silkscreen printed legends that come stock on many mechanical keyboards." (Tampo is another name for pad printing)
This apparently explains what I've been wondering about for so long: why do you have decal-look and non-decal-look pad printing? Why do some better laptops have the non-coated printing?
"Decal look" is coated silk-screened—which explains why the lettering is completely flat on the keycap—and the thick, raised printing that Filco use (along with high-end Dell machines, Fujitsu, vintage Nan Tan keyboards and others) is genuine pad printing (it's thick, raised ink).
Can anyone here corroborate this? Does this all seem reasonable and plausible?
(Annoyingly, the page has a different definition of the various laser approaches compared to western companies' terminology.)
http://www.keysourcechina.com/seven-tec ... nting.html
According to this page:
"Pad print is usually used in some high end keyboards"
"Screen printing is the most widely used printing technology in keycap printing. Similar to pad printing, it can also print various colors. To keep the letters from being scratching, uv coating will be added on top of letters."
Then, according to EliteKeyboards:
http://www.elitekeyboards.com/products. ... 104_grn_tw
"Tampo pad printed legends offer better durability than lasered or silkscreen printed legends that come stock on many mechanical keyboards." (Tampo is another name for pad printing)
This apparently explains what I've been wondering about for so long: why do you have decal-look and non-decal-look pad printing? Why do some better laptops have the non-coated printing?
"Decal look" is coated silk-screened—which explains why the lettering is completely flat on the keycap—and the thick, raised printing that Filco use (along with high-end Dell machines, Fujitsu, vintage Nan Tan keyboards and others) is genuine pad printing (it's thick, raised ink).
Can anyone here corroborate this? Does this all seem reasonable and plausible?
(Annoyingly, the page has a different definition of the various laser approaches compared to western companies' terminology.)