Editing
Rubber dome
From Deskthority Wiki
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
{{stub}} [[File:AppleDesign Keyboard (NMB version) domes from below.jpg|200px|thumb|Membrane rubber domes from the [[AppleDesign Keyboard]]]] '''Rubber dome''' is a type of keyboard switching technology that is most commonly used on modern keyboards, using collapsible rubber domes to provide resistance and tactility to keys. Where all the domes are formed from a single sheet of plastic, they may be referred to (especially by Cherry) as '''rubber sheet''' keyboards. In most cases these days, keyboards will be [[rubber dome over membrane]]. ==Description== In rubber dome keyboards, the collapsible rubber domes replace the helical [[spring]]s found in other switch types. In some cases, metal springs are still used, including the [[Fujitsu Peerless]] switch and one [[Alps integrated dome]] variant. The domes themselves can be discrete objects, or collectively manufactured as a single sheet of rubber. When discrete, they may be glued down onto the top membrane sheet. A single keyboard may use multiple smaller sheets of domes. Most rubber dome keyboards use a membrane contact sheet below the dome to provide electrical switching, but certain rubber dome switches, such as [[Topre switch]]es, use capacitive switching, and a small number of boards used a [[PCB]]. A related design is [[buckling rubber sleeve]], which is a rubber collar that sits around the slider and functions largely identically to a dome. ==Varieties== [[File:Tulip 9151B switch .jpg|thumb|200px|[[Tulip 9151B]] dome over slider arrangement]] ;Plain rubber dome :A slider is moulded into the keycap ([[Keycap_mount|Integrated mount]]) that pushes down on the dome; this is the most common variety ;Dome with slider :Similar to more expensive discrete switches, each key position has a [[slider]] that presses on the dome, onto which the keycap is [[Keycap mount|mounted]]; on some keyboards the slider has a standard Cherry MX mount or Alps mount interface and the board will accept keycaps from mechanical keyboards and donate keycaps for mechanical boards. Dome switches with sliders are now uncommon, but this is the form taken by Topre switches; [[NMB dome with slider]] and [[BTC dome with slider]] are two of the better-known membrane implementations. ;Scissors :Laptop keyboards introduced the use of [[Scissor switch|scissor-like]] mechanisms to stabilise low travel switches that lack a shaft for the keycap to slide inside ==Contact mechanism== Dome switch keyboards use several [[Switch_terminology#Contact_mechanism|contact mechanisms]]: ;Pressure :The "ceiling" of the dome presses two plastic membranes together to connect circuit traces; such keyboards require three membrane layers: upper and lower with exposed conductive traces, and a separator sheet to keep the conductor membranes separated until pairs of contacts are pressed together. This is the most common type of [[rubber dome over membrane]] keyboard. ;Conductive :The ceiling of the dome is coated with carbon, and this conductive layer connects a pair of circuit traces together; the circuit layer can be a membrane, PCB, or (as with the [[Alps integrated dome]] switch), metal contacts. ;Capacitive :[[Topre Realforce]] keyboards use the rubber dome solely as a spring, and switch actuation is performed using capacitance via a 5 cN spring compressed by the dome. ==Gallery== <gallery widths=250 heights=187> File:Dell L100 -- opened, 3.jpg|Dome and membrane sheets from a [[Dell L100]] office keyboard File:AppleDesign Keyboard (NMB version) domes from above.jpg|Pressure domes from the [[AppleDesign Keyboard]], glued down onto the top membrane sheet File:AppleDesign Keyboard (Alps version) rubber domes.jpg|Loose domes File:Fujitsu FKB4700-152 -- rubber dome sheet.jpg|Contiguous sheet of domes File:Scissor switch (RM).jpg|[[Scissor switch]] with its rubber dome File:Alps integrated dome -- Alps mount -- dome.jpg|Conductive domes File:Alps integrated dome -- Alps mount -- dome, inside out.jpg|Conductive dome turned inside out to demonstrate the conductive pad File:Alps integrated dome -- Alps mount -- dome removed.jpg|Metal contacts in the [[Alps integrated dome]] discrete conductive dome switch File:Key Mouse RB-2001-1 -- PCB, top.jpg|Conductive dome PCB, from a Key Mouse RB-2001-1 keyboard<ref>KBTalking β [http://kbtalking.cool3c.com/article/6180 β.βιη°§ηι‘ε°ι»ζ©‘θ ι΅η€RB-2001-1η°‘δ»β.β]</ref> </gallery> ==References== <references> </references> [[Category:Keyboard terms]]
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Deskthority Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Project:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Template used on this page:
Template:Stub
(
edit
)
Navigation menu
Page actions
Page
Discussion
Read
Edit
Edit source
History
Page actions
Page
Discussion
More
Tools
Personal tools
Not logged in
Talk
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Navigation
Main page
Deskthority forum
Support Deskthority
Search
Main categories
Guides
Keyboards
Keyboard switches
Keycaps
Keyboard modding
Pointing devices
Brands & companies
Group buys
Other topics
Wiki info & links
Recent changes
Random page
All pages
Deskthority wiki help
MediaWiki help
Tools
What links here
Related changes
Special pages
Page information