Here's What Cherry’s MX Silent Switches Sound Like

Status
Not open for further replies.

dstarr3

Distinguished
I finally just made the jump to mechanical keyboards, as well. Went with Browns. And honestly, it's no louder than my previous membrane keyboard, once you train yourself to not bottom out on each keystroke. And that's the whole point of mechanical keyboards (with switches not designed specifically to make a noise). The actuation point is in the middle of the key travel, not at the bottom, so you shouldn't be bottoming out on your keypresses anymore. It takes some getting used to, but by the end of it, I'm typing as fast as ever but with much less effort, and no more noise.

Except the space bar. The space bar on my keyboard sounds like God slamming his car door.
 

A_6___

Commendable
Jan 8, 2017
1
0
1,510
My biggest problem with the new switch is that it uses rubber. So far Cherry switches were really, really durable. A good mechanical keyboard lasted long years even with very heavy use. Now I guess this will change. Rubber ages.

Though, a Blue switch keyboard will also get much "weaker". My original Blackwidow lasted me about 3 years before the keys became mushy. It used the original Blue Cherry switches.

@DSTARR3: On Brown, most people don't bottom out, because the click helps you not to. But on the Red, you have no feedback. So most of the time you just bottom out. And this is why Red becomes so loud - sometimes even louder than Blue. Of course you can just "not bottom out" but it is very hard to do, and well, it's a pain.

I tried O-Rings, but they changed the feel of keys totally. So my comfortable Red switches became totally membrane like. So I don't think they are a good solution.

tl;dr: I am skeptic about these new Silent switches.
 

scolaner

Reputable
Jul 30, 2014
1,282
0
5,290


On its face, these are a better solution to o-rings. The Silent switches are designed to quiet the noise without affecting the performance, whereas o-rings, Cherry says, do affect the performance.

But like you, I'm a little skeptical about the rubber. I mean, plastic wears out. So does metal. But rubber seems like it's less durable. I think that Cherry thinks that, indeed, the rubber will wear down faster, so the noise will gradually return. But the company seems to think that it will last long enough.
 

Pompompaihn

Distinguished
Jan 15, 2010
69
1
18,635
I think it has more to do with the absence of other good things to talk about. Intel hasn't effectively released a new product since Haswell, you can only review so many variations of the same video cards with slightly different fans, and there's only so many new things released in the cases/cooling department. Face it, the PC building market is a little stagnant...hence the excitement around Ryzen/Vega.
 

alidan

Splendid
Aug 5, 2009
5,303
0
25,780
@A_6___
Not sometimes, bottoming out keys is several times louder than the plastic click of a blue, its why I o-ringed my, sure its a blue and it makes noise, i like the noise of the click, I don't like the noise of a bottom out though, just taking the o right off my right arrow and pressing the down arrow and the right i can't hear the plastic click at all on the right, but i do hear the bottoming out, and the clicking never really gets louder, but depending on how mad or tired I am, the bottoming out gets several times louder then a plastic click too.

but that's just what I observe. If you never bottom out, then its a non issue.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

TRENDING THREADS