TTesports Knucker mechanical keyboard

chanwei21

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Feb 14, 2013
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Good day everyone!
Is TTesports Knucker 100% mechanical keyboard?
what is difference between a cherry MX mechanical keyboard?
I'm wondering if a mechanical keyboard will live long in my factory but the environment is terrible, a normal keyboard of logitech using around a month and it became so hard to press coz of dusty dirts environment. this is the only cheap mechanical keyboard I found.
 
Solution
A mechanical keyboard will prolly far better then a traditional membrane or scissor switch keyboard. I would get a corsair keyboard in your case. They're designed so that bottoms of the keys are exposed, making cleaning the keyboard much easier to clean.

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16823816021&cm_re=corsair_cherry-_-23-816-021-_-Product

FYI "Cherry MX" is the name of the company that makes the switch in a majority of the mechanical keyboards out there. The colors represent the different feel of each switch. The three most popular are red, brown and blue.

Red switches are smooth. They actuate near the middle of the stroke but give no indication that they have triggered. Blue switches will produce a...

smackers_12

Honorable
Its not mechanical, its a membrane keyboard that uses plunger switches which are just fancy membrane switches. It probably wont live that long and if its a really dirty dusty environment a mechanical board might not last that much longer than a membrane. If you don't have to type heaps you could put a clear sheet across the top of a cheap membrane keyboard.
 
A mechanical keyboard will prolly far better then a traditional membrane or scissor switch keyboard. I would get a corsair keyboard in your case. They're designed so that bottoms of the keys are exposed, making cleaning the keyboard much easier to clean.

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16823816021&cm_re=corsair_cherry-_-23-816-021-_-Product

FYI "Cherry MX" is the name of the company that makes the switch in a majority of the mechanical keyboards out there. The colors represent the different feel of each switch. The three most popular are red, brown and blue.

Red switches are smooth. They actuate near the middle of the stroke but give no indication that they have triggered. Blue switches will produce a noticeable "click" when you hit the actuation point. Brown switches have a little bump at the actuation point but do not produce the "click" Reds are favored by gamers, Blue by typist and brown by people looking for a compromise between both red and blue.
 
Solution