Corsair K57 RGB Wireless keyboard review

Gaming Devices 124 Page 5 of 8 Published by

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Mechanical Cherry Keys


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The backside is just that, plain and simple. We mentioned the rubber feet already. You can use standoffs as well to allow a little more height and create an angled position. It has a very firm grip on my desktop.


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Though the product is wireless, you might want to charge it every now and then, you can connect the USB cable that feeds from your PC. Also, if your battery is dead, with this USB cable you can still use the keyboard. It's merely a plain rubber with one USB connector (2.0). The cable is roughly two meters in length, which offers plenty of reaches. if you are looking for the wireless dongle after you unpackaged the packaging, it's hidden and inserted at the rear side of the keyboard, you can pull it out and insert it into a USB port.


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We mentioned it, but the keyboard is not fitted with mechanical keys, and it's actually refreshing to see a keyboard that hasn't got mechanical switches, but hard-core gamers might disagree with me.


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The keycaps are positioned onto this membrane switch keyboard, there's no profiles and science here, one size fits all with the same dome feel accentuation you know from a keyboard in the pre-mechy era. 


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Here you can see the dome membrane switches the casing of the switches is made with a snowy white color. White reflects light and that brings more and steady RGB lighting diffusion throughout the keyboard and keycaps. 


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The keycaps are made out of ABS and show laser-etched legends slightly translucent to get that backlighting going on through the keycaps. 


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