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Scratchy Fluke 1720A Switches
Posted: 30 Sep 2017, 19:30
by OldIsNew
Posted: 30 Sep 2017, 19:42
by Daniel Beardsmore
The only person I know (other than me) who's ever opened one is Sandy, but his page is in Japanese:
http://sandy55.fc2web.com/keyboard/y1700.html
I did get one apart, but I definitely had to slice through it. I have an unassembled one somewhere and I'm still not entirely sure how they are assembled, but they certainly cannot be safely opened.
It's a shame, as I have a rare linear prototype/example that needs examining internally, but the only way to do that would be x-ray! Nothing whatsoever is known about it.
Posted: 01 Oct 2017, 04:53
by OldIsNew
Daniel Beardsmore wrote:
I did get one apart, but I definitely had to slice through it. I have an unassembled one somewhere and I'm still not entirely sure how they are assembled, but they certainly cannot be safely opened.
Thanks for the info, I was kind of afraid of that. The switches aren't too bad but I was hoping could work on them a bit. Oh well.
Now I just have to learn some electronics - there's a solenoid with a driver circuit on the board - I need to get that working!

- solenoid.jpg (65.18 KiB) Viewed 2324 times
Posted: 17 Oct 2017, 00:46
by OldIsNew
Well I may not be able to do too much about the scratchy switches, but I was able to get the solenoid working by running a circuit off the Teensy. The occasional squeaks from the switches aren't as noticeable! Now just have to do some proper permanent wiring.

- solenoid_sm.jpg (353.54 KiB) Viewed 2236 times
Posted: 17 Oct 2017, 01:25
by Daniel Beardsmore
I have a load of NOS DC-60 switches, but the lowest profile type, and those are squeaky. They're also nowhere near as tactile as the sample switch I got. I also have a sample linear switch that should not exist. There are still mysteries to be solved.
Posted: 02 Nov 2017, 04:13
by OldIsNew
Not motivated enough yet to open/clean all the switches, so I finished up the wiring for now and the board and it's solenoid is working. Luckily the solenoid appears to be 5V (at least its working on 5V) so I'm running it off the Teensy with a simple solenoid driver. I wasn't sure if hooking up the original driver circuit on on the board would work and just didn't feel like experimenting.

- solenoidB.jpg (267.54 KiB) Viewed 2148 times
Quick video of typing with the solenoid:
I will eventually clean the squeaky switches (maybe).
Posted: 02 Nov 2017, 04:17
by JP!
Hard to hear any squeaks over the solenoid

Posted: 02 Nov 2017, 16:30
by Sangdrax
Only difference between the old driver on the board and your new one I can see is you swapped the Opto for a BJT and left out the capacitor. That's is a nice capacitor too. I didn't know they put tantalums in stuff that old.
Love the video and the sound.
Posted: 03 Nov 2017, 08:28
by Wodan
What a stunning little project. The PCB is a piece of art without the solder mask and the beautiful silver traces.
Good luck cleaning those switches, sounds like an intense adventure to figure out how to disassemble them!
Reminds me of the Marquardt Ergo Mini which is a beautiful board with horribly scratchy/bindy switches that I am afraid to break when opening them ... Maybe the board could be nice with some lube? I might never find out hehehe
Posted: 03 Nov 2017, 09:53
by seebart
Wodan wrote: What a stunning little project. The PCB is a piece of art without the solder mask and the beautiful silver traces.
OldIsNew is doing awesome projects like this all the time.