Fink Different: Keyboards as counter-culture.
If you watched Star Wars for the first time, without seeing images of the Empire’s perfectly spaced thousands of goose-stepping minions in spotless white-lacquered armor. If you didn’t see the fleets of black and grey tie-fighters, the immaculately designed star cruisers, the evil moon-shaped flagship… you wouldn’t know that the rebels were rebels. After all, rebels don’t look like rebels if they don’t have something to contrast them against. They just look like normal people. That’s probably why when you see Luke Skywalker, Han Solo or Finn (all rebels) dressed in stormtrooper garb, they somehow seem even more rebellious then they were before. It’s not what they’re wearing, it’s how they wear it. Dirty, scuffed, broken. Helmet missing or askew. An out of place, beat up weapon slung diagonally across their body. It’s the simple act of defacing the uniform that identifies them in our mind as counter-cultural. Funnily enough, it works in reverse. To the dismay of...
Oct 6, 2024
-#3. Leaf swapping Of all the craziest ideas that have ever been dreamed of in switch modification history, the idea of removing and swapping out the leaves of a traditional, MX-style switch is perhaps the single most unlikely to work for a full batch of keyboard switches. In fact, I’d go as far as to say that I’ve never even heard of anyone ever successfully having done this for more than a single switch at any point in my time in the hobby. On the surface the idea seems quite easy – use some tweezers to pull each of the two leaves in an MX switch out and then simply plug in the leaves from another switch in their place. How hard could it really be? What most people fail to realize until they attempt this exactly one and only one time is that MX leaves are both incredibly fragile and sensitive to being bent in any direction. Even just minorly twisting or bending the leaves in a keyboard switch can altogether remove the tactility from a tactile switch if not altogether completely ruin the functionality of the switch entirely – and this is something that can happen without trying to yank the leaves out! Despite this idea having been around for many, many years on end with a stark lack of success, at least one YouTuber I’ve come across has suggested doing this before so… Maybe one day someone will be insane and patient enough to pull this off for a board-filling set of keyboard switches.
Despite the feasibility of each of these various niche aftermarket switch modifications being questionable, the sheer novelty behind each of these ideas makes them more than worth remembering years after they were initially dreamed up. While there is nothing wrong with the practice of simply lubing and/or filming a set of switches of your own, the wide availability of stock switch options out there truly has stunted some of the creative modification ideas out there that are still left to be unexplored. Perhaps being informed of these modifications will push one of you over the edge into exploring and ultimately discovering the next truly unique way to modify switches. Or, maybe it just makes you want to read more weird stuff about switches. Consider checking out some of my other articles here on Drop such as ‘There Will Never Be Another Project Zealio’ or ‘I Think My Switch Is Stuck! – The Tale of Cherry MX Locks’.