• Keyboard with illuminated keys

    From David@wibble@btinternet.com to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sat Dec 6 14:29:12 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    I can still see the keyboard in normal light, but struggle in low light.
    I know, turn the lighting up!

    I am considering an illuminated keyboard for my main PC but it is a long
    time since I have shopped for keyboards apart from Logitech wireless ones.

    Which current brands are reasonably robust, and which should be avoided?

    I have vague memories of Cherry being recommended for the keys themselves,
    but a long time ago.

    Cheers



    Dave R
    --
    AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 10 x64

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  • From GB@NOTsomeone@microsoft.invalid to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sat Dec 6 14:47:54 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    On 06/12/2025 14:29, David wrote:
    I can still see the keyboard in normal light, but struggle in low light.
    I know, turn the lighting up!

    I am considering an illuminated keyboard for my main PC but it is a long
    time since I have shopped for keyboards apart from Logitech wireless ones.

    Which current brands are reasonably robust, and which should be avoided?

    I have vague memories of Cherry being recommended for the keys themselves, but a long time ago.

    I was thinking of buying one of these for -u20. Perhaps, you could get
    one and report how good it is?

    https://www.currys.co.uk/products/cherry-xtrfy-k4v2-mechanical-gaming-keyboard-retro-10289708.html



    Cheers



    Dave R


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  • From Daniel James@daniel@me.invalid to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sat Dec 6 15:07:48 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    On 06/12/2025 14:29, David wrote:
    I can still see the keyboard in normal light, but struggle in low light.
    I know, turn the lighting up!

    SWMBO would say "Learn to touch-type" (No, I can't, either)

    I am considering an illuminated keyboard for my main PC but it is a long
    time since I have shopped for keyboards apart from Logitech wireless ones.

    Which current brands are reasonably robust, and which should be avoided?

    I don't know about brands, but I would start by seeing what's available
    from The Keyboard Company.

    https://www.keyboardco.com/

    I have vague memories of Cherry being recommended for the keys themselves, but a long time ago.

    My keyboard is a filco model, but it uses Cherry "Blue" keyswitches. I certainly find mechanical switches much nicer to type on than the
    cheaper membrane types. The different colours of keyswitch have quite different "feel" and "click" - I spent hours looking at (and listening
    to) YouTube videos of different keyboards in action before I chose mine
    (I know, I should get a life).

    One thing to bear in mind is that some keyboards have keys with legends printed onto them, and these can wear off. Others have the legends
    moulded into the keycap and these do not wear off. I imagine an
    illuminated keyboard will have to have the legends moulded in, in a translucent plastic, my Thinkpad certainly does.
    --
    Cheers,
    Daniel.
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  • From Daniel James@daniel@me.invalid to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sat Dec 6 15:11:22 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    On 06/12/2025 14:47, GB wrote:

    I was thinking of buying one of these for -u20. Perhaps, you could get
    one and report how good it is?

    https://www.currys.co.uk/products/cherry-xtrfy-k4v2-mechanical-gaming- keyboard-retro-10289708.html

    I have no experience of that particular keyboard, but that's a very good
    price for a mechanical keyboard of any sort. If I were looking for a new keyboard I'd take a punt on it.

    I can certainly vouch for the quality of Cherry keyswitches. The
    switches are usually around 50p each if bought singly.
    --
    Cheers,
    Daniel.
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  • From Andy Burns@usenet@andyburns.uk to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sat Dec 6 15:20:22 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    GB wrote:

    I was thinking of buying one of these for -u20. Perhaps, you could get
    one and report how good it is?

    <https://www.currys.co.uk/products/cherry-xtrfy-k4v2-mechanical-gaming-keyboard-retro-10289708.html>
    That /looks/ very similar to the Durgod I've mentioned a couple of
    times, except I see no mention of "metal backplate" which might men it's
    a bit floppy and light.
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  • From wasbit@wasbit@REMOVEhotmail.com to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sun Dec 7 09:24:41 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    On 06/12/2025 14:47, GB wrote:
    On 06/12/2025 14:29, David wrote:
    I can still see the keyboard in normal light, but struggle in low light.
    I know, turn the lighting up!

    I am considering an illuminated keyboard for my main PC but it is a long
    time since I have shopped for keyboards apart from Logitech wireless
    ones.

    Which current brands are reasonably robust, and which should be avoided?

    I have vague memories of Cherry being recommended for the keys
    themselves,
    but a long time ago.

    I was thinking of buying one of these for -u20. Perhaps, you could get
    one and report how good it is?

    https://www.currys.co.uk/products/cherry-xtrfy-k4v2-mechanical-gaming-keyboard-retro-10289708.html


    Shame it's out of stock.
    Seems to be the norm for the cheapest products.
    --
    Regards
    wasbit
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  • From Theo@theom+news@chiark.greenend.org.uk to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sun Dec 7 10:14:52 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    David <wibble@btinternet.com> wrote:
    I can still see the keyboard in normal light, but struggle in low light.
    I know, turn the lighting up!

    I am considering an illuminated keyboard for my main PC but it is a long time since I have shopped for keyboards apart from Logitech wireless ones.

    Which current brands are reasonably robust, and which should be avoided?

    I have vague memories of Cherry being recommended for the keys themselves, but a long time ago.

    Mechanical keyboards are their own whole genre of 'hobby', with aficionados having strong opinions about this or that kind of key switch.

    I wouldn't know where to begin (I mostly use laptops) but to say that you
    can buy 'samplers' of the different kinds of key switches, to try them all
    out and see which ones 'feel right' to you.

    Also, regarding illumination, many 'gamer' keyboards have RGB lighting where you can change the colours (or they cycle through colours in waves). The
    apps to control this under Windows can be a bit of a pain (bloated, adware, etc) so before buying a keyboard also check the situation with its app.

    (under Linux 'OpenRGB' seems to be the standard - only used it from the
    command line rather than the GUI app; it seemed fine)

    Theo
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  • From David@wibble@btinternet.com to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sun Dec 7 13:29:53 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    On Sat, 06 Dec 2025 14:47:54 +0000, GB wrote:

    On 06/12/2025 14:29, David wrote:
    I can still see the keyboard in normal light, but struggle in low
    light. I know, turn the lighting up!

    I am considering an illuminated keyboard for my main PC but it is a
    long time since I have shopped for keyboards apart from Logitech
    wireless ones.

    Which current brands are reasonably robust, and which should be
    avoided?

    I have vague memories of Cherry being recommended for the keys
    themselves,
    but a long time ago.

    I was thinking of buying one of these for -u20. Perhaps, you could get
    one and report how good it is?

    https://www.currys.co.uk/products/cherry-xtrfy-k4v2-mechanical-gaming-
    keyboard-retro-10289708.html

    Interesting.
    Unfortunately it isn't a full keyboard.
    No number pad.

    Cheers



    Dave R
    --
    AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 10 x64

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. www.avast.com
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  • From David@wibble@btinternet.com to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sun Dec 7 13:47:35 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    On Sun, 07 Dec 2025 13:29:53 +0000, David wrote:

    On Sat, 06 Dec 2025 14:47:54 +0000, GB wrote:

    On 06/12/2025 14:29, David wrote:
    I can still see the keyboard in normal light, but struggle in low
    light. I know, turn the lighting up!

    I am considering an illuminated keyboard for my main PC but it is a
    long time since I have shopped for keyboards apart from Logitech
    wireless ones.

    Which current brands are reasonably robust, and which should be
    avoided?

    I have vague memories of Cherry being recommended for the keys
    themselves,
    but a long time ago.

    I was thinking of buying one of these for -u20. Perhaps, you could get
    one and report how good it is?

    https://www.currys.co.uk/products/cherry-xtrfy-k4v2-mechanical-gaming-
    keyboard-retro-10289708.html

    Interesting.
    Unfortunately it isn't a full keyboard.
    No number pad.

    However the black version does seem to have a numeric keypad, going by the picture.

    I have ordered it on spec and will report back once collected from the
    store.

    Cheers



    Dave R
    --
    AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 10 x64

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. www.avast.com
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  • From David@wibble@btinternet.com to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sun Dec 7 14:06:46 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    On Sun, 07 Dec 2025 13:47:35 +0000, David wrote:

    On Sun, 07 Dec 2025 13:29:53 +0000, David wrote:

    On Sat, 06 Dec 2025 14:47:54 +0000, GB wrote:

    On 06/12/2025 14:29, David wrote:
    I can still see the keyboard in normal light, but struggle in low
    light. I know, turn the lighting up!

    I am considering an illuminated keyboard for my main PC but it is a
    long time since I have shopped for keyboards apart from Logitech
    wireless ones.

    Which current brands are reasonably robust, and which should be
    avoided?

    I have vague memories of Cherry being recommended for the keys
    themselves,
    but a long time ago.

    I was thinking of buying one of these for -u20. Perhaps, you could get
    one and report how good it is?

    https://www.currys.co.uk/products/cherry-xtrfy-k4v2-mechanical-gaming-
    keyboard-retro-10289708.html

    Interesting.
    Unfortunately it isn't a full keyboard.
    No number pad.

    However the black version does seem to have a numeric keypad, going by
    the picture.

    I have ordered it on spec and will report back once collected from the
    store.

    Bugger!

    The main picture is misleading. There is no numeric keyboard.

    I've cancelled the order.

    Grumble


    Dave R
    --
    AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 10 x64

    --
    This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. www.avast.com
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  • From Graham J@nobody@nowhere.co.uk to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sun Dec 7 15:16:59 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    David wrote:

    [snip]

    Interesting.
    Unfortunately it isn't a full keyboard.
    No number pad.

    The first PC I ever had came with a small keyboard that didn't have a
    number pad. As a result I always use the numbers above the top row of
    letters and ignore the number pad.
    --
    Graham J
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  • From Daniel James@daniel@me.invalid to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sun Dec 7 15:45:00 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    On 07/12/2025 14:06, David wrote:
    The main picture is misleading. There is no numeric keyboard.

    I've cancelled the order.

    That's what's called a "tenkeyless" keyboard - it's about 25% smaller
    than a normal 105-key PC keyboard. I wouldn't have anything else - my
    desk space is too valuable to fill it with duplicates of keys that are elsewhere on the keyboard.

    I might argue that if you're typing numbers often enough for a numeric
    keypad to offer a worthwhile saving then you're probably typing in data
    when you could be getting it in some electronic format.

    You might prefer this:

    https://www.keyboardco.com/keyboard/cherry-g80-3000n-rgb-mx-silent-red-soft-linear-keyboard.asp

    but it's currently showing as out of stock, and it's -u124.80.
    --
    Cheers,
    Daniel.
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  • From Andy Burns@usenet@andyburns.uk to uk.comp.homebuilt on Sun Dec 7 16:02:32 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    Daniel James wrote:

    That's what's called a "tenkeyless" keyboard - it's about 25% smaller
    than a normal 105-key PC keyboard. I wouldn't have anything else

    Same here now, also known as TKL, I've flashed open source QMK firmware
    onto it, which allows better reprogramming of keys than the
    manufacturers bloated driver ...

    I hardly ever use numpad, but now I can use Fn+0-9 as virtual numpad0-9,
    e.g. the old ALT codes

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  • From Theo@theom+news@chiark.greenend.org.uk to uk.comp.homebuilt on Mon Dec 8 04:12:03 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> wrote:
    Daniel James wrote:

    That's what's called a "tenkeyless" keyboard - it's about 25% smaller
    than a normal 105-key PC keyboard. I wouldn't have anything else

    Same here now, also known as TKL, I've flashed open source QMK firmware
    onto it, which allows better reprogramming of keys than the
    manufacturers bloated driver ...

    I hardly ever use numpad, but now I can use Fn+0-9 as virtual numpad0-9, e.g. the old ALT codes

    Some software eg CAD uses the numpad keys as extra hotkeys, eg NumpadEnter
    does a different thing to MainEnter. It can be annoying to have to throw
    in Fn as well (ie Ctrl-Shift-NumpadEnter becomes Ctrl-Shift-Fn-MainEnter).

    Theo
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  • From Andy Burns@usenet@andyburns.uk to uk.comp.homebuilt on Mon Dec 8 08:04:39 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    Theo wrote:

    Some software eg CAD uses the numpad keys as extra hotkeys, eg NumpadEnter does a different thing to MainEnter.

    Yep, aware of that, the keyboard with factory firmware had no
    combination to simulate NumpadEnter, now the QMK firmware allows me to
    define an extra "layer" while holding Fn, so that I can map NormalEnter
    to NumpadEnter, same for + - * digits period etc

    It can be annoying to have to throw
    in Fn as well (ie Ctrl-Shift-NumpadEnter becomes Ctrl-Shift-Fn-MainEnter).

    For me it's only the rare occasion I need the actual numpad scancodes,
    if I was regularly using software than needed them, I'd break out one of
    the real IBM keyboards ...

    Thanks for mentioning the QMK firmware over in the rPi group, BTW.

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  • From David@wibble@btinternet.com to uk.comp.homebuilt on Mon Dec 8 09:01:02 2025
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    On Sun, 07 Dec 2025 15:16:59 +0000, Graham J wrote:

    David wrote:

    [snip]

    Interesting.
    Unfortunately it isn't a full keyboard.
    No number pad.

    The first PC I ever had came with a small keyboard that didn't have a
    number pad. As a result I always use the numbers above the top row of letters and ignore the number pad.

    I just find it easier to use the numpad.
    Personal preference.

    Cheers


    ave R
    --
    AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 10 x64

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  • From Mike Halmarack@mikehalmarack@gmail.com to uk.comp.homebuilt on Fri Jan 9 09:55:39 2026
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    On 6 Dec 2025 14:29:12 GMT, David <wibble@btinternet.com> wrote:
    <...>
    I've got the Logitech, Logi Craft keyboard. It's super sturdy, great
    keyboard and the illumination is fine al all ight levels. I've had it
    for several years now and had no problems with it.
    --

    Mike
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  • From David@wibble@btinternet.com to uk.comp.homebuilt on Fri Jan 9 16:19:29 2026
    From Newsgroup: uk.comp.homebuilt

    On Fri, 09 Jan 2026 09:55:39 +0000, Mike Halmarack wrote:

    On 6 Dec 2025 14:29:12 GMT, David <wibble@btinternet.com> wrote: <...>
    I've got the Logitech, Logi Craft keyboard. It's super sturdy, great
    keyboard and the illumination is fine al all ight levels. I've had it
    for several years now and had no problems with it.

    Thanks.
    Having a minor problem sourcing it.
    It seems to be tied to business use, e.g. on Amazon and Currys.

    As it is rechargeable do you keep it plugged into a USB port all the time?

    Cheers




    Dave R
    --
    AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 10 x64

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