As I found out from this site: http://www.robotrontechnik.de/, Robotron was the main computer manufacturer in the DDR / East Germany, and they made a whole range of products from small calculators to mainframes. This keyboard was part of a great-looking A5120 'desktop' computer that I decided not to buy even though I really like its looks. What do you do with such stuff ?? (http://www.robotrontechnik.de/html/computer/a5120.htm)
The A5120 was available from 1982 and was made in Chemnitz / Karl-Marx-Stadt. (http://www.robotrontechnik.de/html/standorte/buma.htm) This particular keyboard is a later, serial version and is the one that is part of the 'graphical' package. The switches are hall-effect (see next post for picts). More info on the Robotron keyboards is here: http://www.robotrontechnik.de/html/zube ... .htm#k7637.
I REALLY like how this keyboard looks, it looks much more seventies than eighties somehow, nice and heavy !
The caps are similar to the Siemens keyboard that was posted some time ago: curious how such particular keycaps were being used at both sides of the iron curtain.
I like the slightly disorganized look that seems to be the result of a series of adaptations of the original keyboard.
enough arrows for sure.
The keycaps are doubleshots.
On the right of the keys there is a green thing that turned out to be a kind of 'dongle' that would lock the computer. A simple key with a pattern of 8 holes / not holes, giving 256 possible keys.
The design of the board is extremely modular; the switches are fitted into rails that are held together by the pcb and nuts and bolts.
Unfortunately for a brand which such an unbelievably cool name, there is no visible branding anywhere on the board, also not on the pcb..
The connector is a IFSS-connector, using a very specific serial protocol that seems to have only been used in the DDR (http://www.robotrontechnik.de/html/netz ... k.htm#ifss). Kbdbabel has a converter project going on, and the pinout is here:
