Thank you! You don't seem very happy with my beginerness, sorry dawg, still learning stuff!

reselling keyboards is a good way to make money, that is how I built my collection and paid for all of my electronics/other hobbies. Great for people our age to make a few bucks.green-squid wrote:There is. and that is selling keyboards for me. I was alerted of an AMAZING deal of 85 Alps SKCL/M yellow (or cream? Hopefully yellow) switches for $23 yesterday in the evening and I jumped on it! But now, I only have $2 left (all my money in that account was made selling keyboard related stuff, and I spent it on the Dell model M and these switches).
I may be able to tell my dad to be able to buy a Teensy++, hopefully. I'll ask him.
Also, FUCK! I'm desoldering the diodes and one of them Snapped in half when I was removing it![]()
God damn it. I thought I was gonna be able to desolder all of these little fuckers to use in that handwiring, but NO.
Its not that I'm unhappy, I want to help you. I have handwired a few boards myself with good success. I remember when I was in your place, doing my first hand wired board, and I dont want to see others make the same mistakes I did. I'm here to help if you want me to.
I'm sure you would have sold your complete Zenith with the SKCL Green for more than you'll be able to resell your handwire job with SKCL Yellow ....
wow, power supply wire, that's hardcore as fuck, but probably incredibly hard to work withgreen-squid wrote: A-ha! I think it's easier now with closely looking at the images. I hope I don't get too lost because I won't be using ribbon connectors or anything like that.
I will use cabling off the cables from an ATX power supply (thinker than the teeny tiny wires others use)
God bless Deskthority and the users
For the record, won't resell this keyboard if I end up liking the end result. I probably will like it!
IDE wires are INCREDIBLY tiny and I would not be able to splice it correctly any way.mike52787 wrote:wow, power supply wire, that's hardcore as fuck, but probably incredibly hard to work withgreen-squid wrote: A-ha! I think it's easier now with closely looking at the images. I hope I don't get too lost because I won't be using ribbon connectors or anything like that.
I will use cabling off the cables from an ATX power supply (thinker than the teeny tiny wires others use)
God bless Deskthority and the users
since you have access to power supplies, I am sure you have access to other ancient computer parts. I suggest you use wire from ribbon cables such as ide/floppy cables. That will make it much easier than trying to deal with that giant ass wire.
the pins on the teensy are very small, no way you would get stranded 14 or 16 gauge wire as used on power supplies into themgreen-squid wrote:IDE wires are INCREDIBLY tiny and I would not be able to splice it correctly any way.mike52787 wrote:wow, power supply wire, that's hardcore as fuck, but probably incredibly hard to work withgreen-squid wrote: A-ha! I think it's easier now with closely looking at the images. I hope I don't get too lost because I won't be using ribbon connectors or anything like that.
I will use cabling off the cables from an ATX power supply (thinker than the teeny tiny wires others use)
God bless Deskthority and the users
since you have access to power supplies, I am sure you have access to other ancient computer parts. I suggest you use wire from ribbon cables such as ide/floppy cables. That will make it much easier than trying to deal with that giant ass wire.
Also, if the pins on the teensy are the size of Alps pins, then the ATX wite will fit just fine, I checked
The one I'll go with will work fine, Cable is just pieces of aluminium or copper in a rubber cover.
diodes are cheap... but on a shoestring budget like you are on I don't know what to say lol
Cool! Also, on some of the diodes, a very tiny bit of the tiny glass housing came off (screwdriver) The inside looks intact.
Thank you for the heads up! I will be going the teensy route though.Findecanor wrote: Notes:
* Beware that some Arduino boards AVR µC and USB port are not capable of USB HID protocol but have instead a serial-to-USB hardwired to the µC. The first Arduino talked RS-232 I believe.
* This is a good page about different ways of reading a key matrix. http://www.openmusiclabs.com/learning/d ... -scanning/
It is for musical keyboards but computer keyboards work by the same principle.