Resistive switching
Posted: 28 Apr 2014, 21:56
According to Devlin, Alphameric's sealed military keyboards used "resistive switching", which is possibly described here, for the electronics gurus (people like HaaTa and hasu, not numpties like me):
http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Resistive_switching
That might explain why they have both conductive domes and capacitor pads:
http://imgur.com/a/1raE6
I'm not 100% convinced though that the keyboard uses the same technology as described in that article — there might be something else that falls under that term. Hopefully someone here understands this all better than I do; maybe someone with such a keyboard lives near someone who has the skills to decipher how it works.
The rubber sheet kept out contaminants, which is why it was used for military keyboards. It's not their only switch, and it's not the one that is made today …
What I do find curious is that that keyboard appears to have another plastic layer above all the slider guides, because from the top you see a single slider guide plate, but from below it's discrete plate-mounted slider guides like Key Tronic or Topre.
http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Resistive_switching
That might explain why they have both conductive domes and capacitor pads:
http://imgur.com/a/1raE6
I'm not 100% convinced though that the keyboard uses the same technology as described in that article — there might be something else that falls under that term. Hopefully someone here understands this all better than I do; maybe someone with such a keyboard lives near someone who has the skills to decipher how it works.
The rubber sheet kept out contaminants, which is why it was used for military keyboards. It's not their only switch, and it's not the one that is made today …
What I do find curious is that that keyboard appears to have another plastic layer above all the slider guides, because from the top you see a single slider guide plate, but from below it's discrete plate-mounted slider guides like Key Tronic or Topre.