Kensington releases "Pro Fit washable keyboard", can be washed with water and detergent
With COVID still around some mainboard manufacturers probably Hough it would be a good idea to re-introduce washable keyboards.
Kensington releases the "Pro Fit Washable Keyboard," which allows you to easily wash the entire surface . It is suitable for use in places where the keyboard is shared by an unspecified number of users, such as medical institutions, schools, and internet cafes. Using a waterproof design that covers the precision equipment inside the keyboard with a thin film. It also has a drainage mechanism, making it a safe structure for spilling liquid. It is also resistant to washing by immersion in water, and can be washed in whole using a non-abrasive detergent, multipurpose detergent, soap, germicidal disinfectant, bleach, rubbing alcohol, etc.
The keyboard layout uses a Japanese layout, giving it a soft-touch feel. The connection interface is USB, and a PS/2 conversion adapter is included. The external dimensions are width 445mm, depth 170mm, height 25mm, weight 580g.
The more I think about it in these times, not a bad idea at all really.
Don Vito Corleone
Posts: 40627
Joined: 2000-02-22
There's nothing wrong with rubber dome keyboards for normal usage. In fact, all these news items and articles you see here on Guru3D are typed on that.
Senior Member
Posts: 3364
Joined: 2014-10-20
Nothing is wrong with them, however, as a keyboard modder and enthusiast I just hate the feeling of typing on them.
Give Topre a go, If you like rubber dome, you will just love the Topre experience.
Senior Member
Posts: 11741
Joined: 2012-07-20
Nothing is wrong with them, however, as a keyboard modder and enthusiast I just hate the feeling of typing on them.
Give Topre a go, If you like rubber dome, you will just love the Topre experience.
For gaming, they are better than most of mechanical switches. And Topre is no different here. It is still 4mm travel key that switches ON before bottoming out. And while they claim variable actuation point controlled by software, it relies on extreme precision of each electrical element. Here mechanical keys have advantage.
My mechanical keyboard is not any better. Early trigger=late release. Total travel 3.5mm does not change much on it.
For gaming, I would take 2.5mm total travel with trigger between 1mm and 0.5mm from bottom.
Your Topre and my current keyboards are more for pianist type of people. I am more of classical "typewriter" person who expects to bottom out with force.
Currently I am aware of:
Omron B3KL
Gateron Low Profile Red (Blue has bad reset point)
Senior Member
Posts: 813
Joined: 2009-11-30
For gaming, they are better than most of mechanical switches. And Topre is no different here. It is still 4mm travel key that switches ON before bottoming out. And while they claim variable actuation point controlled by software, it relies on extreme precision of each electrical element. Here mechanical keys have advantage.
My mechanical keyboard is not any better. Early trigger=late release. Total travel 3.5mm does not change much on it.
For gaming, I would take 2.5mm total travel with trigger between 1mm and 0.5mm from bottom.
Your Topre and my current keyboards are more for pianist type of people. I am more of classical "typewriter" person who expects to bottom out with force.
Currently I am aware of:
Omron B3KL
Gateron Low Profile Red (Blue has bad reset point)
topre realforce for gaming i think u should check their gaming line-up
like : https://www.realforce.co.jp/products/R2A-JP4G-BK/
default travel still 4mm (you can custom with key-spacer, for 2mm or 3mm) but APC (actuation point) can be set to 1.5mm (or 2.2mm / 3mm)
Senior Member
Posts: 3364
Joined: 2014-10-20
aaannnd it's rubber dome.