
I don't really have a lot of pictures of the assembly process, since I was more focused on putting it all together.
In the end it ended up using regular Cherry blacks with 62g springs, lubed with a mix of Krytox 205 and 103. Nixdorf switches on WASD, caps and Esc. Clicky switches on Enter and Esc


I ended up using a lot of time wiring it all up, as I was maniacally set to make as flat/thin as possible and of as high quality as possible. This was both good and bad. It made it take way longer than needed and was hard to do, but I really enjoyed it... when not removing insulation from the wires


The Teensy is held with some thick mounting tape. Electrical tape is applied to the bottom of the plate first though, to prevent short circuiting it.

Finished up!

As the Teensy demanded an internal spacing of around 7mm and each middle layer was 3mm, I could either go with all 3 layers, giving it 9mm in total, or use just 2 and use some spacers to give it one extra millimeter, but leave a gab between the bottom and lowest middle layer. I went with the spacers and used 2x 0.06mm washers at each screw.
The USB port is just glued stuck, while also held together by the two layers cramping it, it's remarkably solid and haven't moved the slightest!





How I have been using it since I recieved my DSA Granite set (which is awesome to use):

Having used it for around 1.5 year now, I have never really wished to use, or used, any other keyboard. The only thing that I really miss, is for it to have a split design so I could type with my arms at a more comfortable angle, like a G80-5000 is able to angle each part.
There is of course a few things I would fix if I was to make a new board, but overall I am very satisfied with it.
Huge, and a very late, thanks to matt3o for both the plates and the DSA Granite set!