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HP 9830A - Vintage Cherry M7?
Posted: 03 Aug 2016, 01:43
by snuci
Posted: 03 Aug 2016, 02:07
by zslane
Lovely. Back when spherical meant spherical!
Posted: 04 Aug 2016, 00:54
by LewisR
Back when real designers wore lab-coats!
I love it! Thanks for sharing.
Posted: 05 Aug 2016, 08:15
by terrycherry
Very impressive share post! The switches should be the M7 1st gen/M6.
I got some keyboard with Cherry M7 and M5 switches but not Tee mount.
I still doing some work to declare which PN on Cherry catalog for what M7/M6/M5variant switch.(I know 3 different year of Cherry catalog having the wrong details and PN about that but the pictures are true.)
I have some question to ask:
1. Are all switches have the same pressing force?(no switch pressed heavier than others)
2. I hope you can disassemble one switch. I found the safe way to broke the base lock and it can assemble again without glue. I will take the video for you tonight.
Posted: 05 Aug 2016, 09:47
by bocahgundul
That thicc keycaps doe
Posted: 06 Aug 2016, 21:30
by snuci
terrycherry wrote: I have some question to ask:
1. Are all switches have the same pressing force?(no switch pressed heavier than others)
2. I hope you can disassemble one switch. I found the safe way to broke the base lock and it can assemble again without glue. I will take the video for you tonight.
I am a terrible judge of weight but I think they are all the same. Even the small "function" keys are the same switches. The modifiers that are 2u use two working switches so they are naturally a little stiffer because you are pressing down on two switches at the same time.
I won't take this one apart because of the value of the computer. This is earlier than the IBM 5100 which is IBMs first "personal" computer. If I ever find another keyboard with these switches, I'll consider it. Sorry about that.
Posted: 08 Aug 2016, 22:18
by HuBandiT
Nice! This was the first computer I started learning computer-taming on back in 1979, and, coincidentally, wanting to re-experience its keyboard design is what led me to DT the first place!
Here is some more info on it:
http://www.hpmuseum.org/hp9830.htm
Any chance you could co-operate with some of the new (spherical) keycap design projects to lend a few of the keycaps to them for scanning? Or at least take a few very detailed, (near) ortoghonal photographs on graph paper?
Posted: 08 Aug 2016, 22:58
by XMIT
I really like that END OF LINE key. I can't help but think of a Tron reference.
If I were looking for a new user name, that would be a great one...
Posted: 08 Aug 2016, 23:52
by snuci
HuBandiT wrote: Nice! This was the first computer I started learning computer-taming on back in 1979, and, coincidentally, wanting to re-experience its keyboard design is what led me to DT the first place!
Thank you. Glad I could help with some pics.
Trust me. I've combed over everything I could find on the net but thanks for the URL just the same.
HuBandiT wrote: Any chance you could co-operate with some of the new (spherical) keycap design projects to lend a few of the keycaps to them for scanning? Or at least take a few very detailed, (near) ortoghonal photographs on graph paper?
I have cooperated with another project with some of my beam spring caps but I do need to trust that they will come back because these caps are not easily replaced (if at all). Let me know the project details and we can discuss via PM.
XMIT wrote: I really like that END OF LINE key. I can't help but think of a Tron reference.
If I were looking for a new user name, that would be a great one...
Personally, I liked the "Execute" key cap myself

Posted: 09 Aug 2016, 00:23
by seebart
Posted: 09 Aug 2016, 00:46
by snuci
Very cool. Thanks Seebart!