how are you meant to be saying that someone with good memory cant remember different secure passwords, im sorry, i know all of mine, theyre different and secure, (i know you are saying these things for money)
@@regularnothing3197 Mouse Modding is already a thing taking PCBs from wireless mouse and put them in wired ones or replace the mouse chord and mouse feet also 3D printing Shells
I would also add some people are incredibly rude in the mechanical keyboard community. They hate answering questions. I helped a friend work on their mechanical keyboard and we muddled through working on it together because she said she'd rather struggle than ask for help from that community. It's a shame because it's such a niche hobby.
My experience from first learning about keyboards has been decent I’ve been on kbd fans discord and hamaji neo and some people have been pretentious but most have been helpful IMO
This is the same with most online hobby sites. I have left more discord’s because of people been down right rude, you ask a basic question & get an answer that’s basically calling you out for not knowing. Right.... It’s not like I’m asking a question like “what’s a switch?” The few things I have been very specific to a line of code or orientation of a component. I have scraped so much due to no answers!
@@ramenoodles1789 kbdfans help channel used to be good a couple years ago but it's turned into the same few people trying to answer every question and if you try to answer they get shitty with you because they are no longer the center of attention. It's turned into a clique and a circle jerk and no one's allowed in their circle. Any opinions they have outside of technical help with kbdfans specific pcb's or cases is most of the time wrong anyways. Only hit them up if your dz60 isn't working or you're trying to decide between tofu or kbd67.
That's crazy for a hobby with so few...moving parts. Like there really aren't that many options. The hobby is about deciphering ever changing spec sheets and trial and error and personal preference. Which seems like it doesn't work well mostly because hardly anyone has tried more than 2 or 3 options and so they can't actually give comprehensive advice. I would think that would lead to some insecurity and trying to convince others (and yourself) you know what you're talking about.
Came back to add that alot of it is what I call "Entry point Elitism" which effects pretty much any hobby that gets expensive. The vinyl community is even worse than the mechanical keyboard imo. Some newbie will get/get given a cheap version of a (insert your niche item of choice here) and head over to a discord or forumn to find out more about it. They excitedly post their aquisition to the board only to get told to "throw it in the trash and get a REAL (insert niche item of choice here)!" At that point they either like the item enough to persevere , decide to go at this hobby privately so they will not be mocked, or throw the item away and anytime somebody asks about it tell them "(insert niche hobby here) is full of elitist jerks and not worth your time!" People get so far into hobbies that they loose all perspective on what's it's like to be a newcomer and try to essentially gate keep others out of it by setting a certain dollar amount on what is considered a true hobbyist. That's why I always encourage people to take a look at other hobbies outside of their own. The guys spending $800 on a keyboard may think he's hot shit until he looks at the bill for someone who collects classic cars lol.
Building my own custom sculpt action figures "Wow, this is way cheaper!" Building my own PC "Cheaper than a pre-built, and better too!" Cooking my own food "Healthy and cheap!" Building a custom keyboard "WTF is this?"
Please do not take the "just buy brass" statement at face value and run with it. Please explore the materials yourselves, sound and feel are very personal tastes and EVERY material is different. Brass is very stiff, very rigid, and creates a very clacky, untamed sound. That isn't for everybody.
one other option that is pretty popular is polycarbonate, because it creates a much more bouncier typing feel than brass, and the board usually sound lower pitched.
@@pixtron8936 well yeah but you should try other materials because the sound you desire might be much much different than what he recommends. Brass is very high pitched where as pc is lower pitched.
I bought the Drop ALT hot swap 67% and some accessories. I spent right around $300 for it and it’s accessories. Sold it before I got too deep into the rabbit hole. But now I’m itching to get another.
lol, I bet that happens quite often. Many people tuning/boosting their car engines and forget about upgrading their breaks, shock absorbers and all that. Same story!
Thank you for having done what I previously thought impossible. You’ve preemptively cured me of any desire to buy a bunch of expensive sh*t for this infuriating hobby I only even learned about 24 hours ago.
@@----------------------------- idk if you get what th comment is saying he doesn't even know the things about keyboard that much to suggest someone what to buy , changing DNS locally knowing it or not won't affect when you are selecting the parts or building a pc but you should know about types of stabilizer as different people would like different things like switches
@@ChadPANDA... no you shouldn't because it's unnecessary expectations. You don't need to know those things just to sell keyboards to people who get horny buying keys
@@nickwild7 Weekend track cars are a fucking scam and a half, "Oh I'm not gonna do anything wild to it just some basic body stuff and super light engine mods if even that" then you fast forward 3 years and you're trying to figure out how to fit the engine you ripped out of a scrapyard R8 V10 into your 1968 VW Beetle.
Hi-fi is a true never ending money pit. People seem to have this mindset that if something is more expensive, it must sound better and that that scales infinitely. So it seems like companies can price stuff like amps/dacs as high as they want, regardless of what's in them, and people will still buy them.
@@pandesal_mark Yeah I definitely get that. Even though I don't really believe that amps/dacs over $100-200 make any difference for headphones at least, I'm still kinda interested in getting new stuff just for the looks and novelty. I've currently got a Jotunheim, which is a total waste of money just in terms of sound. So I guess I'm part of the problem lol.
*me wanting to learn the beginners guide on mechanical keyboards* Taeha types: blue switches are loud and annoying me with a blue switch: aight imma head out
I get that it is a cool hobby to join and enjoy, but I am sure the community won't appreciate you promoting flipping at the beginning of the video as it is already a problem. Also to add, I think you meant r/mechmarket, not r/mechanicalkeyboards.
There's plenty of beginner friendly tutorials on the internet. I've built three mechanical keyboards at three different price points following these tutorials, and had no prior knowledge on keyboard parts and how to assemble them. To claim there isn't such things on the internet, is simply ignorant. If anyone is struggling to find beginner friendly tutorials I'll be more than glad to direct you to them.
@@user-pw4qi4gc60 taekeyboards has a lot of diy stuff and beginner friendly videos/guides he is like taeha types but a little more experimental, both very knowledgeable though and very chill about it all.
Help is available literally everywhere. I’ve built multiple as well. Took a month or so to really feel comfortable with everything but resources are out there for sure. I learned everything just by reading and some tutorials.
Thank you. Honestly, I've been following Teaha for a while and have always been anxious to make a keyboard. This video really helped me lay it out and I am glad to see that you're getting into the custom keyboard seen and helping for the community. :)
Months ago, I didn’t know anything about keyboards. Didn’t even know the difference between membrane and mechanical keyboards, but now... switches, keycaps, stabs, plates, cases, I AM ADDICTED.
It's not really cool to promote that custom keyboards is a good hobby to flip. People just really want the board. The recent NK65 sale had people losing their minds because it sold out in seconds. Not saying it's entirely your fault but flippers just need to be minimized, not increased.
I think he could have phrased that intro a lot better, because it totally comes off sounding like he's advocating all the shitty scalping that goes on. I think what he was actually suggesting, though, is doing what TaeHa does - *building* premium keyboards out of already expensive parts and selling them for what the market will pay - which is a shitload.
Yeah like people within the community dont bang each other every now and then and basically do the same. "oh i want that board so much" week later : "oh here you can have it , give me 500$ more". Its so funny reading the comments on this video lmao.
I don't believe you have thought this through enough. If more people get interested in custom keyboards, manufacturers will produce more and hence make it cheaper and better available for all. The fact, that stuff get's sold out in minutes right now just shows, that who ever is producing them, is miscalculating how popular it is. This will likely change.
Everyone on r/mk: Complaining about people flipping keysets and kits for more than triple the original price This dude: This hobby is easy to make money off of
Im just getting into the hobby and bought a 75$ prebuilt optical switches(worst decision ever btw i didnt know any better) and with the keycaps i just bought it's around $100 already. Please help before i buy a custom cable.
@@angelderp6689 I bought the GK61 then modified it to fit into a different chassis. And now I have multiple GB keyboards and keycaps on the way. It's a slippery slope.
True it makes the video look like his intention is for others to rapidly start building and then selling them for wayyyy more. This is still a really fucking anyoing thing with Group Buy Keycaps. I can understand if you want to sell it for more but come on triple the original price is just a joke.
You guys don't get it... He's agreeing with you. He's saying that it's stupid that because, (as he say's in the video) that there aren't any good tutorials or starting points for builders to enter. He's saying that there shouldn't be that much markup on a keyboard compared to a kit. Because there's so few builders you have a high demand with a low supply. By getting MORE PEOPLE into your hobby equipment manufacturers can have better margins thus produce more and gougers will have less incentive to exist meaning those without the skill can have more affordable access.
12:37 Chris mentions r/mechanicalkeyboards as a resource for aftermarket parts, but arguably, I'd say r/mechmarket offers a wider spectrum of parts (aftermarkets, group buys, artisans, etc) for everything keyboards. Still a great video tho!
Its been almost a year since I first watched this and got into custom mechanical keyboards. I got some my friends into the hobby and now we geek out on keyboards together
Im kinda late to this but, the Mechanical Keyboard subreddit literally has a Wiki, that tells you everything about the hobby and links all the popular sites.
I really dislike how the hobby was shown. You've basically told people to start coming in only to make money for themselves in a hobby that already struggles with people flipping parts making prices higher. With someone who has nothing to do with the hobby coming into it (nothing against you) having an opinion on something that has been a relatively closed off community for years up until this point, it's really saddening to be told that people are just going to be coming into the hobby solely to sell for a profit. The like to dislike ratio is what saddens me even more. Most people who see this video won't even know that there is anything wrong with the video, but there's so much misinformation and it is going to cost others more money in the future.
I'm trying to learn more about mechanical keyboards. Since you're saying there are much misinformation in this video, would you mind diving into the specifics?
@@DaFranXX A lot of what he had stated was preference, other points are just outright stupid. He says there are no good ways in order to get into the hobby. He goes on about saying they're really specific or really long, then proceeds to make a 17 minute video with information that is pretty poor. He doesn't go properly into depth on anything because he doesn't know a lot about the board. If a beginner were to watch this video, they run the risk of getting a lot of things wrong. He even goes as far as to state creams are smooth, they really aren't until you've broken them in. Not all Cherry switches are scratchy, but he goes and says they all feel scratchy and cheap. I personally love cherry housings and make sure to get smooth Cherry switches. When talking about hotswap and solder PCBs, he shows 2 hotswap PCBs which is absolutely dumb. He just posted the same PCB but one was a front view, the other was a rear view. When it comes to plate material and layout options (specifically WKL), that is all preference. Brass is not just the best because it has a higher cost. You need to have tried different plates and find what you like in order to say that there is a definitive answer; even then that's only for you personally. I personally prefer aluminium and have tried PC, FR4, Alu and Brass, it all varies on how you want your board to sound and feel. The whole "WKL bad" thing is dumb. People pick that because they like it, you're not just going to find a keyboard that goes with that layout under $250 anyway but he makes it seem like it is an extremely common layout option when it really isn't. The whole screw in/clip in situation was entirely his fault. If you don't know about different types of stabilizers, you shouldn't be building for yourself; let alone someone else. The fact it took him 8 hours in order to desolder and resolder a board is laughable. Even with a desoldering pump, an experienced builder shouldn't take more than 3 hours. Even with having problems with my pump, it only took me 2 hours to desolder a TKL. It goes to show that if you're not capable of doing something, don't do it for others. TL;DR: Makes a long video explaining nothing after complaining about them. Says cherry switches are scratchy when so are creams. Can't tell the difference between hotswap and solder PCBs. Bashes on layout and doesn't understand plate preference is a thing, makes WKL look very common when it isn't. Doesn't know anything about stabilizers and shouldn't be building/desoldering for other people.
A decade ago, I got myself a Cherry G84-4100 low-profile industrial keyboard (this was before low profile mechanical switches were a bigger thing), from which I harvested the switches and built a completely custom hand-wired (i.e. no PCB, all wires and diodes + a microcontroller) keyboard with a home- and handmade wooden casing. It was a pretty great experience for my first build, and I actually found a pretty great generalist tutorial for making your own completely custom hand wired keyboard! Might perhaps not be the "general intro" most people are looking for, though. 😁
A good soldering iron does not cost around $100, by itself is like $30(on the higher end) and if you want to control the temp you can make a dimmer switch setup for like $10. And a set of different tips is like $5.
Video guy: "I'm incredibly disappointed with the mechanical keyboard community." *proceeds to disappoint the rest of the mechanical keyboard community* Giving back, I see!
@@dongwookkim2252 I wouldn't call that flipping tho? he's buying separate parts and turning them into an assembled product to sell to those who don't have the time or skills to build it on their own. I think that's fair. It's like paying extra for an office chair that's pre-assembled
@@andybarrios4204 Keycult kits sell for 2k+ on the aftermarket without any switches or keycaps, kits are mostly if not always the most expensive part. Unless you are using things like really old vintage blacks or other vintage switches, they won't be more than 100 for most builds, if you want a nice gmk keycaps set they range from 100-400 USD but usually not more(Artisans are an exception), what he is promoting is definitely flipping, him in this video is very unknowledgeable about keyboards, and the 60% rule only apply to budget customes, it is a completely different story when you go beyond mid-range boards. And do not only look at the size when you are buying parts for a keyboard, there are various different mounting styles of the plates. And hot-swap and soder plates are usually different, please do not take this video as the whole truth, you will get fucked up hard.
tbh when I first got into mechanical keyboard I just watch videos cluelessly while reading comments and slowly I fill in gaps of information. my first mechanical was a rough journey cause I didn’t even know how to pull out a switch properly T_T I am so glad now there are more content creators explaining thing in this platform
The two worst hobbies are Mechanical keyboards AND Hi-Fi audio/music equipment because they're huge money sinks, I could trade everything I have in both categories for a mid-high class home in my country with a swimming pool. Edit: Ironically I daily drive CherryMX blues because I'm a big fan of the scratchy feel and the noise! (also because I'm scared of damaging my custom Pink sakurios KB which is basically the polar opposite of my blues).
The thing about weird hobby’s is that the stuff sells really well to the right person, currently I’m into vinyl and have extremely expensive vinyl from a person who didn’t know what they had. Short story short I’m selling them and one them is $260
this is The beginner video I needed. I've been watching keyboard videos for days and I had no clue how many other parts you needed, other than a case, keycaps and switches.
This is some thing i was looking for a long long time!!! NO ONE teach or talk about this kind of things , people making all those keyboards vids are just like we are all pro at the begining(even we are not)
9:25 I recently got into mechanical keyboards a few months ago as well, but idk what made you blatantly confident enough to take on client builds without knowing the difference between clip on and screw in stabs. to me that just screams side hustle > hobby which is a shame for the type of message you are spreading to the community.
@@vilextone8031 Encouraging flipping keyboards is harmful to the market. Its specially dumb because this guy obviously didn't know what he was doing when he built the keeb
@@oxy4747 blame manufacturers its only a problem if theres a short supply. The more people flipping the more competition which means prices will go down
@@henryrocks22 You obviously don't know how custom mechanical keyboards work. The community designs and orders keyboards directly from the manufacturer. The way this works, makes everything in short supply, because nothing is manufactured more than once. The more people flipping simply drives up prices.
The sizes of mech keyboards is what bothers me so much and why I am not interested in building my own. I despise keyboards that don't have my 10key. I need them, they are not optional. It was difficult enough to find a full mechanical board with the switches I want and a somewhat low profile so I can keep my typing speed. I'm painting it and changing out the caps and I think that's personalized enough for me lol
@@eraserheadSH Incident Management team member here, I've actually had to rebind the number row to output it's respective punctuation as I never use that row for numbers as it is more cumbersome to type incident numbers, calculations, and phone numbers. Honestly though it's up to personal preference as people get different keyboards for different purposes so I won't shame the 60% or tenkeyless community for choosing that design. Hell I use a HHKB for gaming and typing when I'm not working.
Prices seem to have come down a bit in the last few years, but this is still all really good information. My advice is to figure out what corners are cut in cheaper products, and avoid those. Low end price point is currently around $80 total cost and you can get something workable and halfway decent for that. Cheaper and you start dealing with problems. 65% keyboards are now cheaper than 60% keyboards. Aluminum cases are coming down in price now too.
it's kinda amazing how much has changed in a year. I dove head first into this hobby and have my first completed build and I was able to build it all from just one web site for around 250$ I am even working on a second build this time a TKL. That being said using a pre build PCP case and plate combo did help a lot.
14:58 That's a terrible way to describe what mods are. Mods is short for modifiers. Alt, Ctrl, AltGr and Shift are modifier keys, though grouped in with them are often keys like backspace, enter, tab and basically any other key that is bigger than a normal letter key.
Ah, I finally get to this kind of video. This helped me a bit so I can be more aware of being an *over-hobby.* But if I got to custom my budget-friendly keyboard, I will just focus on my typing and just watch some keyboard vids lol
Getting into the wild world of custom keebs has further reinforced my annoyance with the limited drop/group buy business model. Seriously though, thank you for this video. It feels kinda refreshing seeing a video guide that is both all encompassing and captures the feeling of being lost and disoriented as a noob to the mechanical keyboard scene.
It took me a long time to learn about all types of things in this hobby and so I could make sure I knew what I was getting before I bought something. This hobby will take a while to learn about all of the specifics but it gets easier as you keep learning. This is a simple rule and it should be followed in other aspects of life as well, DON'T RUSH YOUR WHAT YOU BUY AND KNOW WHAT YOU'RE DOING.
I was building a PC around the time that this video was posted, and began to research "diy keyboards" as I like to customize my stuff, and, if possible, build it. I stopped that research very quickly, as I was priced out. With DIY, in almost every situation, it's cheaper. Not all, sure... but most. But DIY keyboards is a whole different monster. As someone who has bought extremely similar components and materials for previous DIY projects... this hobby just looks like a "Epi-Pen" situation, to me... you know, but way less serious and cruel. I don't know... I just don't see why the entire hobby seems to be so needlessly expensive. The situation, in general, seems to be much better now than it was at the time this was posted, but it's still more expensive than it should be. Thanks for the Beginner's guide! I very much felt "out of the loop" when I was initially researching it.
@@RabbitConfirmed are you using it correctly or did is it made of chinesium? Lol My current iron is roughly 35 bucks, and it is great, I even got tons of use out of an old 10 bucks soldering pen lmfao, maybe your tip was worn out or defective.
Only recently I got into this hobby less than a month back. Lurked around in r/mechanicalkeyboards for a while, watched a few Taeha Types streams uploaded on RUclips, visited the big sites selling mechanical keyboard parts, googled the stuff that was new to me and found out for myself all the info that you just complained weren't available in the form of beginner guides. It wasn't that hard to learn all this info by myself, and that to me is the beauty of picking up a new hobby. This hobby is about building a CUSTOM mechanical keyboard, that means there is something for everyone out there, which also means that there are many different variations people get to choose from. I don't see how is this anybody else's fault if you don't do your due research before jumping into purchases. Complaining that there isn't a beginner's guide for a niche hobby is huge entitlement IMO.
I don't want to try and be a devil's advocate, but for my case I really struggled with getting into the custom keyboard. At this point I'm still learning about everything. The hobby is overwhelming in terms of options and their limited supply of them. I was fortunate to have a friend that was a veteran to the scene, but trying to do this yourself is going to be hard. Taehatypes barely released a basic introduction video 2 months ago, even though for a lot of newcomers that's a very recognisable name. I don't think it's fair to say potential frustrations are unjustified.
~Timestamps~ basic parts 3:25 lube 3:39 switches 4:12 PCB's (hot-swap vs solder) 5:15 keyboard sizes 6:06 plate formats 7:38 stabilizers (stabs) 9:05 cases 10:05 keycaps 10:26 where to buy (generally) 11:09 learning more 13:05 terminology you may have no idea about 14:08 where to buy (with help of Taeha Types links) 15:41 is building worth it? 16:19 **not me missing another timestamp comment 😭
@@alanleuthard2689 they would have no problem with people putting boards up for sale for a profit if it didnt affect the prices of the parts of mechanical builds. people selling mechs for a profit is the same for the mech keyboard community as for the pc building community back in 2017 when all prices went up very significant amounts of money because of miners. also, not only the prices have gone up but also people that make mech parts are normally small individuals so the parts are only available for short amounts of time and then flippers come and buy 75% of that while leaving a very small chunk of that to people who will actually use it. please at least before stating something check your facts as to not make a wrong statement.
@@DoktrDubYeah, I’m deep in the hobby now. Beginners should definitely do their own research I just didn’t know where to find basic info, like what a pcb is, can I use bike grease to lube, etc etc Nice to have a baseline to work off of
Thank you for this concise guide. It's funny how this has recently exploded from the niche it's been for so long. KB's were once projects for people who already made or designed things. It used to be rare that a kb enthusiast was learning to solder, most of us had already learned with stereos and other circuits. I'm so happy to see the community growing so fast that your guide is necessary.
Hot swapping being a thing now too.. don’t even need to solder on those boards lol Also I learned soldering in guitar a long time ago.. now I have the urge to build keyboards.. please save my wallet.
I've always wanted a ducky keyboard and I think nows the time to get one. However I dont really know what switches ill like. I use a Razer Black widow and I love the clickyness and the sound. Any ideas on what one to get ?? I want led's too :))
Hahaha. I was so shocked that he said that it can cost you 100 dollars, soldering is skill based. You can buy the 100 dollars and still murder the pcb.
Go check out Taeha Types' tutorial videos, they're really well made. Start with "Why Mechanical Keyboards?" then continue with "Anatomy of a Custom Mechanical Keyboard" and so on.
FIY for beginners looking for a cheap entry.. I went faaaaarrrr down the rabbit hole while researching for the right keyboard for me. I wanted bluetooth and USB-C. I eventually found an RK-71 on Amazon for $37.70 and has been the daily driver ever since. It's cheap, clicky, wireless, great battery life, and heavy feeling. For as cheap as it is, I'm happy enough to recommend it to others on a budget.
If you search hard enough you can learn a LOT without having someone spoon feed all the information to you in an entertaining video... I got sucked in the rabbit hole a week ago and I already know which plates to look for which STABS work better which type of lube to use for certain types of switches depending on whether they’re tactile or linear. I learned to clip STABS and why you should do it and also how to solder and learned about group buys, and a ton of other information about building a keyboard. I still have a couple things to learn but I learned almost everything I need to know to build one in just 3-4 days of watching videos, googling, and reading comments. Also why would you buy 8 plates when he told you to only buy 1 plate lol. That was your own fault bruh! 😂😋 In all seriousness though I appreciate this video it definitely will help a lot of people. I’m just saying you could avoided a lot of these mistakes just by reading more first. The one thing I totally agree with you on though is all the limited runs for a ton of stuff. It would be nice if the best switches were produced in larger quantities so people could more easily build their dream setup. :)
agreed. came into this hobby a few months ago from a friend. within 2 weeks or so, just by browsing r/mk and asking questions in the daily pinned thread, i understood more than this guy apparently took multiple months to learn
i did a thing and bought myself a gmmk pro.... "endgame" keyboard for people that don't wanna a get too deep into it. that or the Q1 by keychron. for the gmmk pro you will definitely want to swap out the stock stabs and plate. other than those two cons, i am really happy with it.
Meanwhile MX Blacks are one of Nathan's favourite, and IMHO much nicer than creams. He could have used any example, like MX Browns Vs Zealios, where at least pretty much everyone would agree.
I think this has true to it. Still - there's r/mechanicalkeyboards and there's r/customkeyboards - one has a price range of like $25 to the moon, and the other starts at the moon.
I was quite interested in this hobby so I've been investigating for a while and as I got deeper down the rabbit hole I realized a few things: This hobby is worthwhile if you're like Taeha and willing to make custom keyboards.... which can be quite costly. It's an expensive hobby, unless you can make money off your hobby. OR you can just buy number of different keyboards being sold out there (keycaps, switches, etc) from well known off-market brands like Ducky. In that case you just have a whole bunch of mech keyboards sitting around. And I don't know if having the flexibility to swap keyboards once in a while is really worth spending hundreds of dollars on it. Yes, it feels good to look at your beautiful keyboard but the novelty wears off. One thing that remains is that your typing experience is always a pleasure. But if that's the only aspect that remains, perhaps it doesn't justify having more than several at most to last you for decades to come. In which case if you're at all sensible, there should be an endgame.
TLDR: Buy a key test kit with many switches (avoid trial and error and wasted time finding the perfect switch for you) Start with converting something that's already out there. (vintage or big name) With the above knowledge make your own. (I have basically retired both my dolch and AEKII in lieu of my Dactyl. Thank you for making this. I never had any of the issues you mentioned when I got into this. I started with soarer's teensy converter, and after making two of those I handwired an AEKII. Once I felt the ALPs cream switches I knew that I'd want something like that vs the vintage cherry blues in the Dolch keyboard that I had attached to a soarer's converter. I think to avoid alot of the issues you had it's better to start off with something vintage you find at a thrift store. Perhaps even just cannibalizing a used big name mechanica and converting it to use a teensy or pro micro with QMK would be the same if scarcity of vintage keys is an issue where a person might be located. Nowadays I'm rocking a 3d printed Dactyl that I made on my own.
Taeha Types as of a week ago has a good beginners guide, so if you want to get into it then go watch it after this video, He doesn't use any terminology a beginner won't understand.
Get Dashlane for free on your first device at www.dashlane.com/kristofer Get 50% off Premium by using code "Kristofer" at check out!
Hello Kris, keep up the great vids. Cant wait to see more great content from you. Stay safe dude.
Dashlane more like Germany am I right comment section?
how are you meant to be saying that someone with good memory cant remember different secure passwords, im sorry, i know all of mine, theyre different and secure, (i know you are saying these things for money)
Hey I live in Vegas what's you offer up name
I HAVE A REALLY GOOD BUDGET COMBO R5 1600af gigabyte b-450 ds3h team t force ram 16 gb 3200 rx 570/580 this can cost 400-500
I recently got into custom keyboards, my wife has left me and the government is taking my home... but damn these Holy Panda switches feel clean
Lol
You don’t need a wife, you can use your lube on novelkeys creams >:)
@@ben_that_is_fresh6696 hehe
*Press F to pay respects*
@@aknc3891 *clack*
its gonna get to a point where we build our own monitors
i’m down
Imma go build my own Mouse some day
Still need to find a Spine and Brain though
@@thenuk.r that’s a really crazy idea, I wonder if that could ever be possible
@@regularnothing3197 Mouse Modding is already a thing taking PCBs from wireless mouse and put them in wired ones or replace the mouse chord and mouse feet also 3D printing Shells
Ok
Mechanical keyboards suck.
sent from my iphone
Ooof
The man himself!! lol
I took all my life savings
The man, the myth, the legend.
I would also add some people are incredibly rude in the mechanical keyboard community. They hate answering questions. I helped a friend work on their mechanical keyboard and we muddled through working on it together because she said she'd rather struggle than ask for help from that community. It's a shame because it's such a niche hobby.
My experience from first learning about keyboards has been decent I’ve been on kbd fans discord and hamaji neo and some people have been pretentious but most have been helpful IMO
This is the same with most online hobby sites.
I have left more discord’s because of people been down right rude, you ask a basic question & get an answer that’s basically calling you out for not knowing.
Right....
It’s not like I’m asking a question like “what’s a switch?” The few things I have been very specific to a line of code or orientation of a component. I have scraped so much due to no answers!
@@ramenoodles1789 kbdfans help channel used to be good a couple years ago but it's turned into the same few people trying to answer every question and if you try to answer they get shitty with you because they are no longer the center of attention. It's turned into a clique and a circle jerk and no one's allowed in their circle. Any opinions they have outside of technical help with kbdfans specific pcb's or cases is most of the time wrong anyways. Only hit them up if your dz60 isn't working or you're trying to decide between tofu or kbd67.
That's crazy for a hobby with so few...moving parts. Like there really aren't that many options. The hobby is about deciphering ever changing spec sheets and trial and error and personal preference. Which seems like it doesn't work well mostly because hardly anyone has tried more than 2 or 3 options and so they can't actually give comprehensive advice. I would think that would lead to some insecurity and trying to convince others (and yourself) you know what you're talking about.
Came back to add that alot of it is what I call "Entry point Elitism" which effects pretty much any hobby that gets expensive. The vinyl community is even worse than the mechanical keyboard imo. Some newbie will get/get given a cheap version of a (insert your niche item of choice here) and head over to a discord or forumn to find out more about it. They excitedly post their aquisition to the board only to get told to "throw it in the trash and get a REAL (insert niche item of choice here)!"
At that point they either like the item enough to persevere , decide to go at this hobby privately so they will not be mocked, or throw the item away and anytime somebody asks about it tell them "(insert niche hobby here) is full of elitist jerks and not worth your time!"
People get so far into hobbies that they loose all perspective on what's it's like to be a newcomer and try to essentially gate keep others out of it by setting a certain dollar amount on what is considered a true hobbyist. That's why I always encourage people to take a look at other hobbies outside of their own. The guys spending $800 on a keyboard may think he's hot shit until he looks at the bill for someone who collects classic cars lol.
4 hours ago i didn’t even know i would spiral down into this hobby
Tbh
Same
yup lolll
Timestamps:
0:00 - Intro
1:31 - Keyboards
3:25 - Parts
4:11 - Switches
5:14 - PCB's
6:06 - Different Sizes
7:15 - Plates
9:05 - Stabilizers
10:04 - Cases
10:25 - Keycaps*
11:09 - Where to buy?
13:03 - Where to learn MORE?
14:11 - Group Buy
14:31 - Lube
14:48 - Mods
15:06 - GMK
15:16 - KeyCult
15:26 - Interest Check (IC)
15:36 - Where to buy MORE?
16:19 - Conclusion
I love you
Good job
Nice profile pic :)
Did God send you?
THANK YOU
I first got into cameras and mechanical wristwatches, now this.... My wallet hates me.... Just came across your videos. Keep up the good work.
LOL I was just watching your video on spring drive didn’t think you’d be into keyboards too 😅
couldn't believe that I'm seeing you here! btw, there is a need about the best ready-made mechanical keyboard good Sir!
Teddy?! Into keyboards?
Hey man, seen your videos many times. I guess what unites us is a good taste and appreciation of well crafted and artistic things. Style and design!
I mean keyboards are nothing compare to the massive cost of a single L-series lens
Building my own custom sculpt action figures
"Wow, this is way cheaper!"
Building my own PC
"Cheaper than a pre-built, and better too!"
Cooking my own food
"Healthy and cheap!"
Building a custom keyboard
"WTF is this?"
Lol
same
yay! i get to do all the work AND pay more! BUT DEM SWITCHES BE CLEAN DOE
Seriously. After typing on box jades, I don't think I can go back to anything else. But very few prebuilts come with them. The rabbit hole is deep
StUCaboose u r a madman for liking box jades
Please do not take the "just buy brass" statement at face value and run with it. Please explore the materials yourselves, sound and feel are very personal tastes and EVERY material is different. Brass is very stiff, very rigid, and creates a very clacky, untamed sound. That isn't for everybody.
one other option that is pretty popular is polycarbonate, because it creates a much more bouncier typing feel than brass, and the board usually sound lower pitched.
damn he's just giving a recommendation geez
@@pixtron8936 well yeah but you should try other materials because the sound you desire might be much much different than what he recommends. Brass is very high pitched where as pc is lower pitched.
@@eton6497 I know.
"dont buy brass"
I nerded out on this for over 10 minutes. GREAT PRESENTATION .. i enjoyed it
RCSparks Studio Oh hi, whatcha doin here?
I love watching your videos
i used to watch your videos 5 years ago its surprising to see you here
wow not expected to be here
Same lol
"would you consider yourself a cool guy"
"no"
typical cool guy response
cooler than your mom
@@RabbitConfirmed dude you just killed them
KristoferYee: What's the worst addiction on the internet?
Me: drug-
KristoferYee: Keyboards!
Hahahahahahahahahah🤣🤣😐
keyboards are worst than drugs
I bought the Drop ALT hot swap 67% and some accessories. I spent right around $300 for it and it’s accessories. Sold it before I got too deep into the rabbit hole. But now I’m itching to get another.
@@jaxcypher4016 Mechanical keyboards addiction is harmful, not on your health but your wallet.
@@cornel9472 cocaine is preatty harder as addiction
Juju cables gives amazing tutorials for beginners. He teaches how to do everything. So there are tutorials out there.
Lol didn't expect to see this - Thank you
JUJU facts remember watching a long time ago
JUJU ya man I love your stuff and your guides helped me through my first keyboard build.
@@loganlovely9728
@@pancakedood
Imagine spending this much on a keyboard and forgetting about the pc.
lol, I bet that happens quite often. Many people tuning/boosting their car engines and forget about upgrading their breaks, shock absorbers and all that. Same story!
@@Reggy9 IMO it's the other way around, this sounds like you upgrading the brakes of your car without upgrading the engine 🤣
@Strawberry Froppyccino some dont care about speed
Also
henkei shoujo
i've spent more on my kayboards than i have on my pc
You guys use keyboards on ur PC?
Thank you for having done what I previously thought impossible. You’ve preemptively cured me of any desire to buy a bunch of expensive sh*t for this infuriating hobby I only even learned about 24 hours ago.
Imagine making money doing a keyboard service without knowing the different types of stabilizers.
Imagine flipping PCs and claiming to be a certified pc technician without knowing how to change the DNS at the local level.
kris sees money and he goes to get money
can i get a source on this one for the lols lmao
@@----------------------------- idk if you get what th comment is saying he doesn't even know the things about keyboard that much to suggest someone what to buy , changing DNS locally knowing it or not won't affect when you are selecting the parts or building a pc but you should know about types of stabilizer as different people would like different things like switches
@@ChadPANDA... no you shouldn't because it's unnecessary expectations. You don't need to know those things just to sell keyboards to people who get horny buying keys
Honestly the worst hobbies are hi-fi equipment and this, if I were to sell all of my stuff, I could easily get a brand new Civic.
it doesn´t matter in which one you start, you inevitably get carried to the other one
@@pandesal_mark I can agree with cars. My $3900 weekend track car turned into a 30k money pit in 4 years 😂😂
@@nickwild7 Weekend track cars are a fucking scam and a half, "Oh I'm not gonna do anything wild to it just some basic body stuff and super light engine mods if even that" then you fast forward 3 years and you're trying to figure out how to fit the engine you ripped out of a scrapyard R8 V10 into your 1968 VW Beetle.
Hi-fi is a true never ending money pit. People seem to have this mindset that if something is more expensive, it must sound better and that that scales infinitely. So it seems like companies can price stuff like amps/dacs as high as they want, regardless of what's in them, and people will still buy them.
@@pandesal_mark Yeah I definitely get that. Even though I don't really believe that amps/dacs over $100-200 make any difference for headphones at least, I'm still kinda interested in getting new stuff just for the looks and novelty. I've currently got a Jotunheim, which is a total waste of money just in terms of sound. So I guess I'm part of the problem lol.
*me wanting to learn the beginners guide on mechanical keyboards*
Taeha types: blue switches are loud and annoying
me with a blue switch: aight imma head out
"I'm not saying that you need bigger sizes, but as soon as you see something you want or need..., prepare to have a hold of your wallet"
Have a hole in ur wallet
when out of context
Hole in your wallet
crying in TKL
You know somethings wrong when your keyboard is more expensive than your pc...
With current GPU pricing situation?
Yeah mate!
Something is very wrong
I get that it is a cool hobby to join and enjoy, but I am sure the community won't appreciate you promoting flipping at the beginning of the video as it is already a problem. Also to add, I think you meant r/mechmarket, not r/mechanicalkeyboards.
This.
yes.
Exactly
Flippers and botters have ruined the hobby in the span of a year now.
AGREED. just days ago the nk65 sold out in less than 30 seconds. I swear I refreshed at 9am sharp
There's plenty of beginner friendly tutorials on the internet. I've built three mechanical keyboards at three different price points following these tutorials, and had no prior knowledge on keyboard parts and how to assemble them. To claim there isn't such things on the internet, is simply ignorant. If anyone is struggling to find beginner friendly tutorials I'll be more than glad to direct you to them.
Could you give me a link to some?
@@user-pw4qi4gc60 taekeyboards has a lot of diy stuff and beginner friendly videos/guides he is like taeha types but a little more experimental, both very knowledgeable though and very chill about it all.
What’s a good hotswap board ?
Help is available literally everywhere. I’ve built multiple as well. Took a month or so to really feel comfortable with everything but resources are out there for sure. I learned everything just by reading and some tutorials.
@@carter5731 the dz60 is pretty good
Thank you. Honestly, I've been following Teaha for a while and have always been anxious to make a keyboard. This video really helped me lay it out and I am glad to see that you're getting into the custom keyboard seen and helping for the community. :)
Months ago, I didn’t know anything about keyboards. Didn’t even know the difference between membrane and mechanical keyboards, but now... switches, keycaps, stabs, plates, cases, I AM ADDICTED.
Watching this nine months later and I’m amazed at how many of the tutorials getting pumped out are so new
It's not really cool to promote that custom keyboards is a good hobby to flip. People just really want the board. The recent NK65 sale had people losing their minds because it sold out in seconds. Not saying it's entirely your fault but flippers just need to be minimized, not increased.
I think he could have phrased that intro a lot better, because it totally comes off sounding like he's advocating all the shitty scalping that goes on. I think what he was actually suggesting, though, is doing what TaeHa does - *building* premium keyboards out of already expensive parts and selling them for what the market will pay - which is a shitload.
Yeah like people within the community dont bang each other every now and then and basically do the same. "oh i want that board so much" week later : "oh here you can have it , give me 500$ more". Its so funny reading the comments on this video lmao.
Bout to flip, y’all just making it sound way better since people are desperate for keyboards. Time to bring me my money
David Hoffnung This comment makes no sense. You’re complaining about nothing.
I don't believe you have thought this through enough. If more people get interested in custom keyboards, manufacturers will produce more and hence make it cheaper and better available for all.
The fact, that stuff get's sold out in minutes right now just shows, that who ever is producing them, is miscalculating how popular it is. This will likely change.
Everyone on r/mk:
Complaining about people flipping keysets and kits for more than triple the original price
This dude:
This hobby is easy to make money off of
SHAGGY -OW Did you miss the part about him being new to the hobby?
Im just getting into the hobby and bought a 75$ prebuilt optical switches(worst decision ever btw i didnt know any better) and with the keycaps i just bought it's around $100 already. Please help before i buy a custom cable.
@@angelderp6689 I bought the GK61 then modified it to fit into a different chassis.
And now I have multiple GB keyboards and keycaps on the way. It's a slippery slope.
True it makes the video look like his intention is for others to rapidly start building and then selling them for wayyyy more. This is still a really fucking anyoing thing with Group Buy Keycaps. I can understand if you want to sell it for more but come on triple the original price is just a joke.
You guys don't get it... He's agreeing with you. He's saying that it's stupid that because, (as he say's in the video) that there aren't any good tutorials or starting points for builders to enter. He's saying that there shouldn't be that much markup on a keyboard compared to a kit.
Because there's so few builders you have a high demand with a low supply. By getting MORE PEOPLE into your hobby equipment manufacturers can have better margins thus produce more and gougers will have less incentive to exist meaning those without the skill can have more affordable access.
12:37 Chris mentions r/mechanicalkeyboards as a resource for aftermarket parts, but arguably, I'd say r/mechmarket offers a wider spectrum of parts (aftermarkets, group buys, artisans, etc) for everything keyboards. Still a great video tho!
mechkeys has zero anything for aftermarket parts, it's just straight up false info
I was about to add this
I was about to say this
Its been almost a year since I first watched this and got into custom mechanical keyboards. I got some my friends into the hobby and now we geek out on keyboards together
Im kinda late to this but, the Mechanical Keyboard subreddit literally has a Wiki, that tells you everything about the hobby and links all the popular sites.
I really dislike how the hobby was shown. You've basically told people to start coming in only to make money for themselves in a hobby that already struggles with people flipping parts making prices higher. With someone who has nothing to do with the hobby coming into it (nothing against you) having an opinion on something that has been a relatively closed off community for years up until this point, it's really saddening to be told that people are just going to be coming into the hobby solely to sell for a profit. The like to dislike ratio is what saddens me even more. Most people who see this video won't even know that there is anything wrong with the video, but there's so much misinformation and it is going to cost others more money in the future.
ok
I'm trying to learn more about mechanical keyboards. Since you're saying there are much misinformation in this video, would you mind diving into the specifics?
@@midnightmista2190 oh no my favorite youtuber is getting called out for a bad video, better reply ok to all the comments :(:(:(:(:(:(:(:(
And of course he hides behind his shit video like a coward
@@DaFranXX A lot of what he had stated was preference, other points are just outright stupid.
He says there are no good ways in order to get into the hobby. He goes on about saying they're really specific or really long, then proceeds to make a 17 minute video with information that is pretty poor. He doesn't go properly into depth on anything because he doesn't know a lot about the board. If a beginner were to watch this video, they run the risk of getting a lot of things wrong.
He even goes as far as to state creams are smooth, they really aren't until you've broken them in. Not all Cherry switches are scratchy, but he goes and says they all feel scratchy and cheap. I personally love cherry housings and make sure to get smooth Cherry switches.
When talking about hotswap and solder PCBs, he shows 2 hotswap PCBs which is absolutely dumb. He just posted the same PCB but one was a front view, the other was a rear view.
When it comes to plate material and layout options (specifically WKL), that is all preference. Brass is not just the best because it has a higher cost. You need to have tried different plates and find what you like in order to say that there is a definitive answer; even then that's only for you personally. I personally prefer aluminium and have tried PC, FR4, Alu and Brass, it all varies on how you want your board to sound and feel. The whole "WKL bad" thing is dumb. People pick that because they like it, you're not just going to find a keyboard that goes with that layout under $250 anyway but he makes it seem like it is an extremely common layout option when it really isn't.
The whole screw in/clip in situation was entirely his fault. If you don't know about different types of stabilizers, you shouldn't be building for yourself; let alone someone else. The fact it took him 8 hours in order to desolder and resolder a board is laughable. Even with a desoldering pump, an experienced builder shouldn't take more than 3 hours. Even with having problems with my pump, it only took me 2 hours to desolder a TKL. It goes to show that if you're not capable of doing something, don't do it for others.
TL;DR: Makes a long video explaining nothing after complaining about them. Says cherry switches are scratchy when so are creams. Can't tell the difference between hotswap and solder PCBs. Bashes on layout and doesn't understand plate preference is a thing, makes WKL look very common when it isn't. Doesn't know anything about stabilizers and shouldn't be building/desoldering for other people.
2:11 - OMG, you have our cable ❤️
When are your keyboards going back In stock?
I love you guys 🖤🖤
YAY KRIS IS COMING BACK WITH ANOTHER VIDEO.
Kris make a video about making a list and building the pc using ONLY the Newegg pc builder
A decade ago, I got myself a Cherry G84-4100 low-profile industrial keyboard (this was before low profile mechanical switches were a bigger thing), from which I harvested the switches and built a completely custom hand-wired (i.e. no PCB, all wires and diodes + a microcontroller) keyboard with a home- and handmade wooden casing. It was a pretty great experience for my first build, and I actually found a pretty great generalist tutorial for making your own completely custom hand wired keyboard! Might perhaps not be the "general intro" most people are looking for, though. 😁
Over a year later and you're still the only "how to get started" video. Appreciate this.
A good soldering iron does not cost around $100, by itself is like $30(on the higher end) and if you want to control the temp you can make a dimmer switch setup for like $10. And a set of different tips is like $5.
always with the tips
Video: what the keyboard community doesn't tell you...
Me: know literally all of this thanks to the keyboard community
Video guy: "I'm incredibly disappointed with the mechanical keyboard community."
*proceeds to disappoint the rest of the mechanical keyboard community*
Giving back, I see!
how is he disappointing the community back? sorry im dumb
@@dongwookkim2252 I wouldn't call that flipping tho? he's buying separate parts and turning them into an assembled product to sell to those who don't have the time or skills to build it on their own. I think that's fair. It's like paying extra for an office chair that's pre-assembled
@@andybarrios4204 Keycult kits sell for 2k+ on the aftermarket without any switches or keycaps, kits are mostly if not always the most expensive part. Unless you are using things like really old vintage blacks or other vintage switches, they won't be more than 100 for most builds, if you want a nice gmk keycaps set they range from 100-400 USD but usually not more(Artisans are an exception), what he is promoting is definitely flipping, him in this video is very unknowledgeable about keyboards, and the 60% rule only apply to budget customes, it is a completely different story when you go beyond mid-range boards. And do not only look at the size when you are buying parts for a keyboard, there are various different mounting styles of the plates. And hot-swap and soder plates are usually different, please do not take this video as the whole truth, you will get fucked up hard.
@@dongwookkim2252 he flips everything he buys on the channel so I wouldn't expect less
@@waitwhat9222 its not flipping, wtf. its a building service. nothing more to add to that
tbh when I first got into mechanical keyboard I just watch videos cluelessly while reading comments and slowly I fill in gaps of information. my first mechanical was a rough journey cause I didn’t even know how to pull out a switch properly T_T I am so glad now there are more content creators explaining thing in this platform
Best info online on mechanical keyboard building. I have been weeks on forums and no success learning how to do it. Thanks Kristofer clear advise
The two worst hobbies are Mechanical keyboards AND Hi-Fi audio/music equipment because they're huge money sinks, I could trade everything I have in both categories for a mid-high class home in my country with a swimming pool.
Edit: Ironically I daily drive CherryMX blues because I'm a big fan of the scratchy feel and the noise! (also because I'm scared of damaging my custom Pink sakurios KB which is basically the polar opposite of my blues).
You forgot school
bruh
then you have spent WAY too much lmao its not that hard... so ur saying that you could spend upwards of hundreds of thousands of dollars
Coin collecting would like to have a word with you!
@@lordoompasshungiteminion6579 I graduated as a general surgeon from a public school, I didn't pay a dime. :)
The thing about weird hobby’s is that the stuff sells really well to the right person, currently I’m into vinyl and have extremely expensive vinyl from a person who didn’t know what they had. Short story short I’m selling them and one them is $260
"find some, order it"
custom keyboard industry:
"GOOD FUKIN LUCK WITH THAT"
this is The beginner video I needed. I've been watching keyboard videos for days and I had no clue how many other parts you needed, other than a case, keycaps and switches.
This is some thing i was looking for a long long time!!! NO ONE teach or talk about this kind of things , people making all those keyboards vids are just like we are all pro at the begining(even we are not)
my biggest gripe with this hobby is that limited runs are all too common, but i guess that makes a lot of custom keyboards one in 500 billion
I like when u start talking about keycaps it says "Cases"
9:25 I recently got into mechanical keyboards a few months ago as well, but idk what made you blatantly confident enough to take on client builds without knowing the difference between clip on and screw in stabs. to me that just screams side hustle > hobby which is a shame for the type of message you are spreading to the community.
Who cares? He is the one who fd up, not the community. Chill
@@vilextone8031 Encouraging flipping keyboards is harmful to the market. Its specially dumb because this guy obviously didn't know what he was doing when he built the keeb
@@oxy4747 blame manufacturers its only a problem if theres a short supply. The more people flipping the more competition which means prices will go down
@@henryrocks22 You obviously don't know how custom mechanical keyboards work. The community designs and orders keyboards directly from the manufacturer. The way this works, makes everything in short supply, because nothing is manufactured more than once. The more people flipping simply drives up prices.
Now I will start flipping them, botting up the group buys everywhere
Wow i just got into this hobby and i’ve been searching online for days for info. This is the BEST intro i’ve seen.
i love how you can tell that he loves the hobby but wants to hate it so much but can’t, so he makes a video on how bad it is in essence
Look at kris acting all innocent when he knows he hasn’t uploaded in 4 weeks
The sizes of mech keyboards is what bothers me so much and why I am not interested in building my own. I despise keyboards that don't have my 10key. I need them, they are not optional. It was difficult enough to find a full mechanical board with the switches I want and a somewhat low profile so I can keep my typing speed. I'm painting it and changing out the caps and I think that's personalized enough for me lol
Why do you need low profile keyboard tho?
10keys are completely useless unless your job is accounting or banking.
@@eraserheadSH Disagree, I despise entering numbers with the number row, the 10keys are sooo much better.
You could buy an external 10 key.
@@eraserheadSH Incident Management team member here, I've actually had to rebind the number row to output it's respective punctuation as I never use that row for numbers as it is more cumbersome to type incident numbers, calculations, and phone numbers.
Honestly though it's up to personal preference as people get different keyboards for different purposes so I won't shame the 60% or tenkeyless community for choosing that design. Hell I use a HHKB for gaming and typing when I'm not working.
OK....OK....Im 35 seconds in and Im hearing that people are spending "STUPID AMOUNTS OF MONEY"
OK nothing new here
Prices seem to have come down a bit in the last few years, but this is still all really good information. My advice is to figure out what corners are cut in cheaper products, and avoid those. Low end price point is currently around $80 total cost and you can get something workable and halfway decent for that. Cheaper and you start dealing with problems. 65% keyboards are now cheaper than 60% keyboards. Aluminum cases are coming down in price now too.
it's kinda amazing how much has changed in a year. I dove head first into this hobby and have my first completed build and I was able to build it all from just one web site for around 250$ I am even working on a second build this time a TKL. That being said using a pre build PCP case and plate combo did help a lot.
14:58 That's a terrible way to describe what mods are. Mods is short for modifiers. Alt, Ctrl, AltGr and Shift are modifier keys, though grouped in with them are often keys like backspace, enter, tab and basically any other key that is bigger than a normal letter key.
He's talking about modified ustom keycaps, not the actual modifier keys.
No, it's mod as in modified keypads. Not mods as in the modifier keys.
What, there's tonnes of good introductory videos about the hobby and kb building. Taekeyboards made so many nice vids years ago for example
I made a custom mechanical keyboard a year ago because I had a membrane...
Now I have 10 mechanical keyboards :/
Ah, I finally get to this kind of video. This helped me a bit so I can be more aware of being an *over-hobby.*
But if I got to custom my budget-friendly keyboard, I will just focus on my typing and just watch some keyboard vids lol
Getting into the wild world of custom keebs has further reinforced my annoyance with the limited drop/group buy business model.
Seriously though, thank you for this video. It feels kinda refreshing seeing a video guide that is both all encompassing and captures the feeling of being lost and disoriented as a noob to the mechanical keyboard scene.
0:02 I can’t be the only one that thought this was a hair on my screen
Alternative title: Why you shouldn't custom build a mechanical keyboard
Agreed
Taeha: Builds keyboard for Tfue
Kris: Builds computer for Taeha
It took me a long time to learn about all types of things in this hobby and so I could make sure I knew what I was getting before I bought something. This hobby will take a while to learn about all of the specifics but it gets easier as you keep learning. This is a simple rule and it should be followed in other aspects of life as well, DON'T RUSH YOUR WHAT YOU BUY AND KNOW WHAT YOU'RE DOING.
I was building a PC around the time that this video was posted, and began to research "diy keyboards" as I like to customize my stuff, and, if possible, build it. I stopped that research very quickly, as I was priced out.
With DIY, in almost every situation, it's cheaper. Not all, sure... but most. But DIY keyboards is a whole different monster.
As someone who has bought extremely similar components and materials for previous DIY projects... this hobby just looks like a "Epi-Pen" situation, to me... you know, but way less serious and cruel.
I don't know... I just don't see why the entire hobby seems to be so needlessly expensive. The situation, in general, seems to be much better now than it was at the time this was posted, but it's still more expensive than it should be.
Thanks for the Beginner's guide! I very much felt "out of the loop" when I was initially researching it.
I can’t wait for the Ryan Higa pc build video!
You're out of your mind if you spend $100 on a soldering iron. Mine cost like $10 and it's still doing great.
vouch
honestly, I bought one for 20$ and it's total shit after 3-4 times of normal use lol
@@RabbitConfirmed are you using it correctly or did is it made of chinesium? Lol
My current iron is roughly 35 bucks, and it is great, I even got tons of use out of an old 10 bucks soldering pen lmfao, maybe your tip was worn out or defective.
If you plan on using it a lot and want something more specialised I understand it
@@RabbitConfirmed Are you cleaning the tip properly?
Only recently I got into this hobby less than a month back. Lurked around in r/mechanicalkeyboards for a while, watched a few Taeha Types streams uploaded on RUclips, visited the big sites selling mechanical keyboard parts, googled the stuff that was new to me and found out for myself all the info that you just complained weren't available in the form of beginner guides. It wasn't that hard to learn all this info by myself, and that to me is the beauty of picking up a new hobby. This hobby is about building a CUSTOM mechanical keyboard, that means there is something for everyone out there, which also means that there are many different variations people get to choose from. I don't see how is this anybody else's fault if you don't do your due research before jumping into purchases. Complaining that there isn't a beginner's guide for a niche hobby is huge entitlement IMO.
I don't want to try and be a devil's advocate, but for my case I really struggled with getting into the custom keyboard. At this point I'm still learning about everything. The hobby is overwhelming in terms of options and their limited supply of them. I was fortunate to have a friend that was a veteran to the scene, but trying to do this yourself is going to be hard. Taehatypes barely released a basic introduction video 2 months ago, even though for a lot of newcomers that's a very recognisable name. I don't think it's fair to say potential frustrations are unjustified.
~Timestamps~
basic parts 3:25
lube 3:39
switches 4:12
PCB's (hot-swap vs solder) 5:15
keyboard sizes 6:06
plate formats 7:38
stabilizers (stabs) 9:05
cases 10:05
keycaps 10:26
where to buy (generally) 11:09
learning more 13:05
terminology you may have no idea about 14:08
where to buy (with help of Taeha Types links) 15:41
is building worth it? 16:19
**not me missing another timestamp comment 😭
Im so glad you included him whispering lube as a timestamp ahaha
In addition, you must be lucky to live in a country where all these delights can be delivered. Hi, from Moldova.
Honestly doesnt really seem like a hobby anymore, but rather an addiction
Bro you want more people flipping kbs? what are you doing....
cool
The keyboard community has a problem with people putting together keyboards for sale? What a horrible community.
@Joey H nk65 v2 :(
@@posilly8564 sad but true :/
@@alanleuthard2689 they would have no problem with people putting boards up for sale for a profit if it didnt affect the prices of the parts of mechanical builds. people selling mechs for a profit is the same for the mech keyboard community as for the pc building community back in 2017 when all prices went up very significant amounts of money because of miners. also, not only the prices have gone up but also people that make mech parts are normally small individuals so the parts are only available for short amounts of time and then flippers come and buy 75% of that while leaving a very small chunk of that to people who will actually use it. please at least before stating something check your facts as to not make a wrong statement.
This would’ve saved me hours of research and being confused. Thank you good sir
Don’t take the advice too directly, some of it was really bad advice, he didn’t do his research at the time.
@@DoktrDubYeah, I’m deep in the hobby now. Beginners should definitely do their own research
I just didn’t know where to find basic info, like what a pcb is, can I use bike grease to lube, etc etc
Nice to have a baseline to work off of
My 7 year old office keyboard: "Master are you replacing me?"
F UC K NO
Thank you for this concise guide. It's funny how this has recently exploded from the niche it's been for so long. KB's were once projects for people who already made or designed things. It used to be rare that a kb enthusiast was learning to solder, most of us had already learned with stereos and other circuits. I'm so happy to see the community growing so fast that your guide is necessary.
Hot swapping being a thing now too.. don’t even need to solder on those boards lol
Also I learned soldering in guitar a long time ago.. now I have the urge to build keyboards.. please save my wallet.
I've always wanted a ducky keyboard and I think nows the time to get one. However I dont really know what switches ill like. I use a Razer Black widow and I love the clickyness and the sound. Any ideas on what one to get ?? I want led's too :))
I got the kalih speed pro you can look up different switch types on RUclips personally I LOVE the speed pros
Mark Salvador Don’t get a Glorious Switch Tester
Cherry Blues or browns, reds are pretty nice if you’re a gamer.
Ellis Eberwein I wouldn’t recommend Scratchy reds
@@pandesal_mark I never said that gamer switches existed thought? So don't really understand what you are trying to tell me.
You really don't need an expensive soldering iron. I think $30-50 is a better range to think about. Mine costed $20 and I've never had any issues.
Hahaha. I was so shocked that he said that it can cost you 100 dollars, soldering is skill based. You can buy the 100 dollars and still murder the pcb.
Mine costs $3
you don't need to spend $100 on an iron, $30 Aoyue is perfectly fine.
Bro thank you so much. This is the forth or so video i watch. Noone is explaining it, yes i would even say hiding information. You´re the man.
THANK YOU. Exactly the video I needed! I was so overwhelmed with all the technical terms but no one was explaining everything at once.
Go check out Taeha Types' tutorial videos, they're really well made. Start with "Why Mechanical Keyboards?" then continue with "Anatomy of a Custom Mechanical Keyboard" and so on.
@@zahitemremetin606 Thank you! I did check out his channel after watching this video! Thank you for these recommendations :D
After watching this and Taeha’s video, I end up spending $350 on a keyboard one month later.
F
"we'll thats where I step in."-Taeha Types
"If you want To build A Mechanical Keyboard. Do yourself a favor, and don't."
FIY for beginners looking for a cheap entry.. I went faaaaarrrr down the rabbit hole while researching for the right keyboard for me. I wanted bluetooth and USB-C. I eventually found an RK-71 on Amazon for $37.70 and has been the daily driver ever since. It's cheap, clicky, wireless, great battery life, and heavy feeling. For as cheap as it is, I'm happy enough to recommend it to others on a budget.
c l i c k y b a d
If you search hard enough you can learn a LOT without having someone spoon feed all the information to you in an entertaining video... I got sucked in the rabbit hole a week ago and I already know which plates to look for which STABS work better which type of lube to use for certain types of switches depending on whether they’re tactile or linear. I learned to clip STABS and why you should do it and also how to solder and learned about group buys, and a ton of other information about building a keyboard. I still have a couple things to learn but I learned almost everything I need to know to build one in just 3-4 days of watching videos, googling, and reading comments.
Also why would you buy 8 plates when he told you to only buy 1 plate lol. That was your own fault bruh! 😂😋
In all seriousness though I appreciate this video it definitely will help a lot of people. I’m just saying you could avoided a lot of these mistakes just by reading more first.
The one thing I totally agree with you on though is all the limited runs for a ton of stuff. It would be nice if the best switches were produced in larger quantities so people could more easily build their dream setup. :)
agreed. came into this hobby a few months ago from a friend. within 2 weeks or so, just by browsing r/mk and asking questions in the daily pinned thread, i understood more than this guy apparently took multiple months to learn
Imagine buying 6 plates with the wrong layout... smh my head.
U don’t need the my head just smh
Take a Joke
Shaking my head my head
Itz SupremeDestroy how is that a joke?????
@@xbox_tommyr237 RiP in Peace
Damn i was literally thinking about getting into making custom keyboards last week, this video is gonna blow up the kb building community now!
Nah this guy only has like 400k subs, there are channels dedacated to this hobby with more subs.
@@iamjogun like who? I only watch like 3 keyboard content makers.
@@ltsjoke5443 the most I can think of is 3ildcat, and bad seed tech or brandon taylor if I stretch it
"Group Buy - if you pay this now you'll receive it God knows when" 😂😂
man, I remember watching this before taking my own deep dive...what a journey
i did a thing and bought myself a gmmk pro.... "endgame" keyboard for people that don't wanna a get too deep into it. that or the Q1 by keychron. for the gmmk pro you will definitely want to swap out the stock stabs and plate. other than those two cons, i am really happy with it.
"My favourite switch is the cream switch"
ahhh spoken like a true newbie ;)
Meanwhile MX Blacks are one of Nathan's favourite, and IMHO much nicer than creams. He could have used any example, like MX Browns Vs Zealios, where at least pretty much everyone would agree.
I kinda lost it when he said the creams were smooth
I hate how he promotes mechs as a money making strategy... That's just going to drive up prices even more.
ok
let everyone eat!
cool
I think this has true to it. Still - there's r/mechanicalkeyboards and there's r/customkeyboards - one has a price range of like $25 to the moon, and the other starts at the moon.
Or make them lower because of an influx of keyboards
How the hell did you get a Keycult just getting into the hobby? That's some crazy luck. Meanwhile some of us here are struggling.
Man literally said he built a bot to get pings from mechmarket and he knows taeha.
I was quite interested in this hobby so I've been investigating for a while and as I got deeper down the rabbit hole I realized a few things:
This hobby is worthwhile if you're like Taeha and willing to make custom keyboards.... which can be quite costly. It's an expensive hobby, unless you can make money off your hobby.
OR you can just buy number of different keyboards being sold out there (keycaps, switches, etc) from well known off-market brands like Ducky. In that case you just have a whole bunch of mech keyboards sitting around. And I don't know if having the flexibility to swap keyboards once in a while is really worth spending hundreds of dollars on it. Yes, it feels good to look at your beautiful keyboard but the novelty wears off. One thing that remains is that your typing experience is always a pleasure. But if that's the only aspect that remains, perhaps it doesn't justify having more than several at most to last you for decades to come. In which case if you're at all sensible, there should be an endgame.
upvotethis
TLDR:
Buy a key test kit with many switches (avoid trial and error and wasted time finding the perfect switch for you)
Start with converting something that's already out there. (vintage or big name)
With the above knowledge make your own. (I have basically retired both my dolch and AEKII in lieu of my Dactyl.
Thank you for making this. I never had any of the issues you mentioned when I got into this. I started with soarer's teensy converter, and after making two of those I handwired an AEKII. Once I felt the ALPs cream switches I knew that I'd want something like that vs the vintage cherry blues in the Dolch keyboard that I had attached to a soarer's converter. I think to avoid alot of the issues you had it's better to start off with something vintage you find at a thrift store. Perhaps even just cannibalizing a used big name mechanica and converting it to use a teensy or pro micro with QMK would be the same if scarcity of vintage keys is an issue where a person might be located. Nowadays I'm rocking a 3d printed Dactyl that I made on my own.
*looks at my slowly accumulating pile of keyboards*
SELL?? WHEN I COULD K E E P???
My precious! O
Taeha Types as of a week ago has a good beginners guide, so if you want to get into it then go watch it after this video, He doesn't use any terminology a beginner won't understand.
This could possibly be called the verge's version of a mechanical keyboard video.
A year ago I watched this and now I am addicted. I love and hate you Kris LMAO