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Alps AKB-3420 vintage keyboard
Posted: 30 Nov 2015, 14:07
by snuci
Posted: 30 Nov 2015, 14:22
by BlueBär
What a beautiful board!
Posted: 30 Nov 2015, 15:09
by seebart
OH GOD it's the Alps holy grail !

Posted: 30 Nov 2015, 15:12
by klikkyklik
Wow, snuci - you've outdone yourself! Awesome!!
Posted: 30 Nov 2015, 15:13
by ramnes
Yeah, I really hesitated on getting that one. Great board!
Posted: 30 Nov 2015, 15:19
by Chyros
Haha I bet some people would give an arm and a leg for that layout xD . Very nice board, and it looks like it's in outstanding condition

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Posted: 30 Nov 2015, 15:26
by seebart
Chyros wrote: Haha I bet some people would give an arm and a leg for that layout xD . Very nice board, and it looks like it's in outstanding condition

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Yeah I would !

Posted: 30 Nov 2015, 17:46
by Touch_It
Large Q key will be the new meta. Awesome board!
Posted: 01 Dec 2015, 11:19
by terrycherry
Is the S-100 computer stand for the "Micro computer" on that day?
Posted: 01 Dec 2015, 12:12
by Muirium
Man, that profile! I'm referring to this image every time discussion of rows on high profile sphericals comes up!
"snuci's tall assed alps"
Posted: 01 Dec 2015, 18:00
by snuci
terrycherry wrote: Is the S-100 computer stand for the "Micro computer" on that day?
"S-100 computer" actually refers to computers that utilize the S-100 bus much like ISA, PCi etc. More information about the S-100 bus is available here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S-100_bus. Below are three examples of S-100 computers from from my collection.

- MITS Altair 8800, 8800a, 8800b (from top to bottom)
- MITS-Tower-small.jpg (65.14 KiB) Viewed 14028 times
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(You can click to see a bigger picture)
The input is the switches and the output is the lights. Naturally, they aren't too interesting on a keyboard forum other than knowing that this is where it all started before keyboards because early mainframe computers also started with switches and lights.
There is a fourth Altair called the Altair 8800B Turnkey that does not have any switches or lights. This was meant to connect to a terminal and came with a
Beehive B100 terminal.
Posted: 02 Dec 2015, 12:55
by terrycherry
Interesting. Hope to see what the switch it has.
Posted: 02 Dec 2015, 23:52
by nourathar
super gorgeous !
Posted: 03 Dec 2015, 03:23
by keycap
Closely resembles a Kishsaver. That logo and those spherical caps look amazing... I've never seen a 1.75x1-sized Q key, though.
Posted: 03 Dec 2015, 03:27
by keycap
terrycherry wrote: Interesting. Hope to see what the switch it has.
They're Alps SKCC Tall Cream switches, I believe.
Posted: 03 Dec 2015, 03:32
by snuci
keycap wrote: I've never seen a 1.75x1-sized Q key, though.
Pretty weird, huh? Looks like a way to cheat and not have a 1/2 key there so that the key cap footprint remained square.
Seebart was good enough to create a Wiki entry for this board. I have the manual so I'll scan it tomorrow and make it available to Seebart so he can post it in the Wiki article as well if anyone is interested.
wiki/Alps_AKB-3420
Posted: 03 Dec 2015, 04:14
by terrycherry
You should upload the manual. I hope to make it to USB.
Posted: 03 Dec 2015, 13:31
by snuci
I made a quick web page at my site here:
http://vintagecomputer.ca/vintage-alps- ... -keyboard/
The manual is there as image files and as a PDF. Enjoy.
Posted: 03 Dec 2015, 13:36
by andrewjoy
Oh wow , that thing is amazing , looks so sexy!
Posted: 21 Mar 2016, 23:20
by jacobolus
Interesting. This Bondwell Portable Computer Model 12 seems to have a very similar keyboard – the main section is identical.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/111940528976
I thought the weird non-standard stagger (1/2u between each row) was a Bondwell-specific thing, considering their later Cherry MX blue laptop keyboards have a (1/4u between rows) non-standard stagger. Guess it was something Alps cooked up though.
Posted: 08 Apr 2016, 07:26
by inyourgroove
Posted: 08 Apr 2016, 12:56
by snuci
Very cool! Thanks for posting the pics. That is strange that the boards are different. Can you post a pic of the front on the keyboard assembly without the case? I'd like to see how much difference there is in dates. I assume this was made in Japan seeing as it came from there? It is possible that one of them is "serial" and the other is "parallel" so that's why the boards would be different but the board numbering and even the Alps logo shouldn't be different. They, otherwise, look identical from the outside.
The only other one I've seen was in the Japanese auctions so at least now we know who has it. Congrats!
Posted: 08 Apr 2016, 13:07
by seebart
Sweet, I'm pretty sure that's the one I was looking at. Congrats.
Posted: 08 Apr 2016, 18:34
by terrycherry
Glad to know three of us having this keyboard! Love the original box here.
I excited that your PCB is differ to us, becasue mine and snuci's keyboard are the same PCB.
Hope to see the switches inside your keyboard right here.
Posted: 08 Apr 2016, 20:45
by inyourgroove
This was the one on the Japanese auction site bought through a proxy last month. This defiantly uses the same parallel connection ASCII interface.
Seems to have the same switches as the others:
Date code 7th week 82. so early 1982 build date?
Definitely made in Japan.
Serial sticker is not the same:

Posted: 08 Apr 2016, 21:52
by snuci
While my internal ASSY/MFG sticker has different information on it, mine has "Model No KCCAB902" printed on the front of the circuit board (visible in my pictures above). Your "Assembly Number" on the sticker is KCCAA902 (it not visible on the PCB pictures you have, so they are not far off if that Assy No. matches your Model No.
It's probably a small difference like Serial vs Parallel, ASCII vs EBCIDIC, or something like that that is enough of a change to the circuitry that it makes the PCB look totally different.
Posted: 11 Apr 2016, 13:15
by terrycherry
As you said your keyboard is the early version of AKB-3420.
That make sense about the electronics and the old trains on PCB.
Thanks for the photos.
Posted: 27 Jun 2016, 14:09
by alh84001
Just won this one from a Japanese auction. I was hoping it would go under the radar, but some other people were also paying attention. It will take some time for it to reach me, but from the looks of it, it is more than worth it. It looks absolutely gorgeous. And it will be my first encounter with SKCC.
Looking at the pics at
http://page18.auctions.yahoo.co.jp/jp/a ... enlargeimg, this one has a ribbon cable coming out of it. Doesn't look original to me, so I am wondering what that connector on the other side is.
Posted: 27 Jun 2016, 14:13
by seebart
Regarding SKCC that's about as nice as it gets IMO. I just really don't like to import from the other side of the globe, not that this Alps keyboard will ever be sold here. Do share some pics with us when you get it.
Posted: 27 Jun 2016, 14:47
by alh84001
Yeah. I couldn't resist it. It's got that kishy vibe. I was actually looking for some 5576 boards, and after I missed A01 for about $20, this seemed like a good way to vent some steam. Expect pics in some two months time
