Not just any board -- this is "TheBoard"!
- Halvar
- Location: Baden, DE
- Main keyboard: IBM Model M SSK / Filco MT 2
- Favorite switch: Beam & buckling spring, Monterey, MX Brown
- DT Pro Member: 0051
I found this on ebay and couldn't resist...
This is "TheBoard", first sold in 1985, built by the small German company "Hohe Electronics", and AFAIK the first range of keyboards featuring programmable LCD keys.
This is how it looked before I retrobrighted the keys yesterday.
Futaba switches. These feel strange, a bit flimsy, but not bad. They're tactile when pressing down, and they click when releasing. Overall they're pretty loud. Actuation force is supposed to be at 70 g according to the datasheet I got, but they feel lighter to me, maybe because of their age. I didn't ripster-measure them yet.
I was lucky: the board is fully working.
Keycaps look like this:
They're doubleshot, and I like their unique profile. The manufacturer obviously tried a little too hard here to get the legends nice and thin. All rows have the same profile, so the board is stepped like an old typewriter.
The "String" key allows definition of macro strings on the keyboard. The board has 64K RAM, which is what my C64 had when this model came out in 1985. According to a price list from 1989, the board cost 998 DM + VAT, so it was more expensive than my C64, too.
The board has 24 instead of 12 function keys, and every function key has a 20x8 LCD matrix on it. The LCDs can be programmed using special MS DOS software that comes with the board. I'm stuck here at the moment. The board came with two 5,25" floppy disks containing the software, but my old floppy drive that I got out from a dark corner of my basement yesterday seems not to be able to read the disks (or any disk, for that matter), so I don't know if it's the drive or just the age of the disks that's the problem. Of course I'd rather find some newer software for Windows or Linux for it, but I couldn't find anything yet on that big worldwide network that we use today but nobody really had access to at that time.
According to the data sheet, 4 layers can be defined for every key, so if you press a modifier and have programmed the LCDs accordingly, the displays are supposed to change.
This is "TheBoard", first sold in 1985, built by the small German company "Hohe Electronics", and AFAIK the first range of keyboards featuring programmable LCD keys.
This is how it looked before I retrobrighted the keys yesterday.
Futaba switches. These feel strange, a bit flimsy, but not bad. They're tactile when pressing down, and they click when releasing. Overall they're pretty loud. Actuation force is supposed to be at 70 g according to the datasheet I got, but they feel lighter to me, maybe because of their age. I didn't ripster-measure them yet.
I was lucky: the board is fully working.
Keycaps look like this:
They're doubleshot, and I like their unique profile. The manufacturer obviously tried a little too hard here to get the legends nice and thin. All rows have the same profile, so the board is stepped like an old typewriter.
The "String" key allows definition of macro strings on the keyboard. The board has 64K RAM, which is what my C64 had when this model came out in 1985. According to a price list from 1989, the board cost 998 DM + VAT, so it was more expensive than my C64, too.
The board has 24 instead of 12 function keys, and every function key has a 20x8 LCD matrix on it. The LCDs can be programmed using special MS DOS software that comes with the board. I'm stuck here at the moment. The board came with two 5,25" floppy disks containing the software, but my old floppy drive that I got out from a dark corner of my basement yesterday seems not to be able to read the disks (or any disk, for that matter), so I don't know if it's the drive or just the age of the disks that's the problem. Of course I'd rather find some newer software for Windows or Linux for it, but I couldn't find anything yet on that big worldwide network that we use today but nobody really had access to at that time.
According to the data sheet, 4 layers can be defined for every key, so if you press a modifier and have programmed the LCDs accordingly, the displays are supposed to change.
Last edited by Halvar on 06 May 2013, 01:15, edited 2 times in total.
- Halvar
- Location: Baden, DE
- Main keyboard: IBM Model M SSK / Filco MT 2
- Favorite switch: Beam & buckling spring, Monterey, MX Brown
- DT Pro Member: 0051
Under the LCD in each keycap there is a small PCB with a custom chip that Hohe developed for their boards.
There was also a model that had (smaller) LCDs on all keys, and models with even more function keys. You can see the soldering points for the LCDs next to every switch in the third picture above.
These boards were also marketed in the US. Somebody probably told Hohe how silly "TheBoard" actually sounds, because they called it "LC Board" in the US.
Information about this board on the internet is very sparse. I had hoped that some linux hacker had written drivers for it during the last 25 years, but if so I still have to find them.
I did find the website of the engineer Reinhard Engstler who invented the technology and still has an engineering company named [E³] that constructs LCD keys: http://www.e3-keys.com/english/history.htm
If anybody on DT knows anything more about this keyboard, or maybe even has software or manuals for it, please answer here or contact me. I'd really like to program the LCDs on this beast.
Anyway, thanks for watching!
There was also a model that had (smaller) LCDs on all keys, and models with even more function keys. You can see the soldering points for the LCDs next to every switch in the third picture above.
These boards were also marketed in the US. Somebody probably told Hohe how silly "TheBoard" actually sounds, because they called it "LC Board" in the US.
Information about this board on the internet is very sparse. I had hoped that some linux hacker had written drivers for it during the last 25 years, but if so I still have to find them.
I did find the website of the engineer Reinhard Engstler who invented the technology and still has an engineering company named [E³] that constructs LCD keys: http://www.e3-keys.com/english/history.htm
If anybody on DT knows anything more about this keyboard, or maybe even has software or manuals for it, please answer here or contact me. I'd really like to program the LCDs on this beast.
Anyway, thanks for watching!
Last edited by Halvar on 06 May 2013, 01:33, edited 2 times in total.
- matt3o
- -[°_°]-
- Location: Italy
- Main keyboard: WhiteFox
- Main mouse: Anywhere MX
- Favorite switch: Anything, really
- DT Pro Member: 0030
- Contact:
really great find. congrats!
- kbdfr
- The Tiproman
- Location: Berlin, Germany
- Main keyboard: Tipro MID-QM-128A + two Tipro matrix modules
- Main mouse: Contour Rollermouse Pro
- Favorite switch: Cherry black
- DT Pro Member: 0010
Here's an old DT thread about the model with LCDs on the alphanumeric keys as well:Halvar wrote:[…] If anybody on DT knows anything more about this keyboard, or maybe even has software or manuals for it, please answer here or contact me. I'd really like to program the LCDs on this beast.
http://deskthority.net/marketplace-f11/ ... -t915.html
I have quite a bunch of original documentation about it, including a software tutorial, a programming manual and a lot of technical stuff marked "nur für den internen Gebrauch".
What I have been missing is the software for it.
Now I know it was a good idea to keep an old computer with a functioning 5.25" floppy drive

(PM'd)
- Halvar
- Location: Baden, DE
- Main keyboard: IBM Model M SSK / Filco MT 2
- Favorite switch: Beam & buckling spring, Monterey, MX Brown
- DT Pro Member: 0051
@kbdfr: Awesome, that's way more than I hoped for! Let's see if we can't liberate those old bits.
@Kurrk: wow, when I see this I have to think about August 3 once again ....
@matt3o: thanks mate!
@Kurrk: wow, when I see this I have to think about August 3 once again ....
@matt3o: thanks mate!
- Daniel
- Location: Blackforest Germany
- Main keyboard: Various
- Main mouse: Kensington Slimblade + MX518
- Favorite switch: Cherry MX Blue and Black + BS
- DT Pro Member: 0028
The "String"-Key is funny
Many people in Germany say "String" instead of "Steuerung" (control) because they think "Strg" is the abbreviation for it.
Nice font.

Nice font.
