![]() ![]() The design, in fact, specifically encourages you not to bottom out the switch, so you have a nice, bouncy keyfeel when typing. It's also important to bear in mind, though, that the Input Club designed this switch so that you don't need to bottom out. This, compared to Logitech’s Romer-G switches, which we discovered had a peak force of ~48gf, actuation force of ~43gf, and bottom-out force of only ~60gf. Thus, if you were to draw a line from the peak of the tactile bump to the beginning of that force increase, it would be a nice, gentle slope.Īlso note that this is a fairly heavy switch 60gf on the peak of the tactile and 52gf at actuation is significant enough, but the Halo True requires a whopping 100gf to bottom out. That’s a delta of just 8gf.įurther, just after the actuation point, the force bumps up to about 62-64gf. ![]() Note, for instance, that the peak force is about 60gf, but the actuation point (which is well after the peak tactile force) is just 52gf. Although this is a tactile switch, the overall curve looks relatively smooth. Just as we draw some conclusions from our own switch testing, you can see quite a bit in the Input Club’s Halo True force curve.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |