"Does anyone know of 6x6mm2 buttons that aren't a pain to push?" - Me
I'm currently 'researching' keyboard options for a portable raspberry pi device. So far I have an old cheap chinese bluetooth keyboard, some 4x4 keypads and an xbox controller and I'm not happy. Without screw holes -that were on the eBay listing pics- I can't mount those 4x4 boards anywhere and I don't like the pressure I have to apply to the switches. The BT board I might be able to hack in to, but after failing with the chatpad I feel slightly "meh" about it.
[UPDATE] mapped out TPs and Letters and stuff and wrote arduino sketch for pro micro
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1aaoIAshYLMAF9ghrW0Vmfo8WK18rPOxnou2Njl7glPg/edit?usp=sharing
https://hackaday.io/page/2329-xbox-chatpad
Instead I designed a little board that's inspired by the nokia 5510 - this cellphone has a "full" qwerty keyboard, 24 buttons on the left and 21 buttons on the right side of the display. So having two boards of this 4x5+3 keys equipped with the (way too heavy) buttons that I want to replace might be a good start. It also has diodes against ghosting - should have added a ghostbusters logo on there. Damn. Next rev.
I don't like indents in my finger from pushing a button - so does anyone have any other options? I'm running out of Ben Heck portables episodes.
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IR Remote $0.95. Comes with remote (car MP3), IR receiver, cable and a small board with headers.
https://www.aliexpress.com/store/product/3-in-1-Remote-Control-Receiver-N-E-C-Coded-Infrared-Module-with-Female-to-Female/1184212_1886823684.html
I have done the IR decoding for NEC on a STM32F030. The protocol is simple.
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well I mean/need something with more characters - like a qwerty keyboard. Now that I have the cheap chinese chatpad hooked up via the testpoints to an arduino I'm a bit pleased.
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Interesting questions... Here are some possible solutions:
- Touch (capacitive) buttons (http://elm-chan.org/works/capsens/report_e.html)
- Display with integrated touch screen (https://www.sparkfun.com/products/retired/9584)
- Use only a (cheap) resistive touch screen with static symbols from behind. (https://www.sparkfun.com/products/13631)
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Touch stuff makes sense, but it's a bit "unhaptic" for me, where the normal tactile ones are "too haptic".
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A small DC motor can be used to vibrate the screen and provide some haptic feedback, but I don't know if it suits to your needs.
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@danjovic good call, I even have some small vibrating motors here
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May be those keyboards for tablets - some of the cheaper ones have a USB cable instead of Bluetooth. If they use the usual USB keyboards chip, then these might also talk PS/2.
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I'm looking for something smaller but this is definitely something to consider. Thanks for mentioning, sounds interesting that they might talk PS/2.
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Good keyboard is major PITA for DIY devices. Been there, done that. I'd say that 50% of my struggle with all kinds of portable computers I've done before was because of :
1, I can buy usable keyboard, but has little keys counts, so I have to workaround it - just like #Pavapro - portable AVR programmer
2, I need bigger (QWERTY) keyboard, but it's problematic to find good, little, cheap and future available keyboards - the problem I'm solving in #MiniBSD laptop computer
By the way, the little 4x4 keyboard from pavapro is quite nice to touch, much much better than 6x6mm keys, especially from china *
Having mass manufacturing budget, I'd make my own keyboard, but that is not feasible for DIY projects. 3D printers could help - in theory. Imagine printing 4x4mm big keycaps with letter "engraving" on average DIY reprap machine. DIY-ers have to salvage keyboards from something else (one-off solution, can you buy the same keyboard in 3 years from now?) or hack together kind-of-keyboard from separate switches (usually feels bad, is bulky, lot of soldering, needs key caps). Both are meh solutions.
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* The good manufacturers actually offer more then one 6x6 switch type, differing in actuating force. Different actuating forces is distinguished by different key actuator color, see here http://www.tme.eu/gb/katalog/microswitches-tact-pcb/1aa22d0e9b520617ef8d26897a315e90.html for example.
EDIT: I found out I missed "mm" unit twice
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These are exactly my thoughts! You wan't your projects to be reproducible / maintainable and not depend on stuff that won't be produced anymore some point later.
Thank you for the tme.eu link - thanks to them I knew what to look for on ebay and safed 4 euros. I almost feel bad saying this though. B3F-1000 was the one with the lowest activation force I could find (100g).
While I was writing I've remembered your keyboards and found them quite nice, I have to keep an eye out for this on ebay.
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