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dom0 | 8 years ago
In tacticale switches the bump and the making of the contact are mechanically connected.
Using the moment of finger/key contact quite obviously selects for travel, among other things.
dom0 | 8 years ago
In tacticale switches the bump and the making of the contact are mechanically connected.
Using the moment of finger/key contact quite obviously selects for travel, among other things.
jetpacktuxedo|8 years ago
Nope! This is rarely (if ever?) the case. In alps switches, for example, there are two totally separate leafs, one of which handles the tactile feeling and the other of which is responsible for the actual actuation. If you browse through Haata's Plotly[1] you can see that many switches actuate well after the tactile bump. Though they are often pretty closely related in terms of their depth in the keypress, they are wholly unrelated from one another mechanically.
[1] https://plot.ly/~haata
dom0|8 years ago
Cherry MX.