Hi all, I have a quick and possibly very simple question. I have a keychron V6 with red switches being delivered to me tomorrow. I just want to know what switches and keycaps will fit this keyboard? This is my very first mechanical/swappable keyboard and I know nothing about it. I want to try other switches, mainly brown, blue and yellow. Also want to have a different look keycaps every now and then. I’ve searched on their site, but I had no idea which ones to choose. lol Thanks in advance.

  • randomperson
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    1 year ago

    Milktooth (https://milktooth.nu) will let you try 10 different switches for $15. Worth it to save you the trouble of buying multiple sets of switches before finding ones you like.

      • randomperson
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        1 year ago

        Think of it as a sampler. You get a sample of 10 different switches, 5 of each kind of your choosing, and then return the sampler after 5 days. When you find the switch you like, you can buy a whole set for your keyboard.

          • thejml@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            My wallet agrees with that description of this hobby.

            I’ve paid between $0.25/Switch and $1.50/Switch…

            Luckily I tend toward small splits with 42-54 switches.

  • Good Girl [she/they]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    As some other commenters said, find a tester and see what you like when it comes to switches.

    I’m personally a big fan of linears but I’ve been warming up to tactiles though I’m a big cherry brown hater.

    Atm my main keeb has SP-star tactiles and they feel pretty good compared to other tacts I’ve tried. (though i haven’t tried some all stars like the bobas or holy pandas)

    My favorite linears (that aren’t in the zealios family) are probably Durock L2s though I’m very partial to Tangerines. Good starter switches are milky yellows and inky blacks as well. You can’t really go wrong with cherry reds though.

    As to keycaps, You can’t really go wrong as long as you find something that’ll fit your keeb size. The keychron V6 is a full size board so look for anything that has enough caps for full size boards.

    Double shot PBT is pretty sought after for caps because the legends on each key are their own layer of plastic rather than just being painted on like some OEM keycaps. Pudding caps are very nice if you’re not looking for anything too expensive or fancy. There’s a world of keycap profiles as well, you can take a look here: https://www.keycaps.info/

    OEM and cherry profile are what most people are probably familiar with. I heavily prefer SA profile as it’s a sculpted profile (meaning it has a nice dip on each key for your fingers.) Though I do enjoy DSA as well. (on DSA profile every key cap has the same shape and height)

    I’d recommend you get a nice OEM profile set first though before splurging later on a different profile.

  • asqapro@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Their website mentions that “both 3-pin and 5-pin MX mechanical switches” are supported. 3-pin switches are also known as “plate mount” switches and 5-pin are also known as “PCB mount”. I’d recommend getting a switch tester / sampler off Amazon to get an idea for what switches you want (linear vs tactile vs clicky). There’s a lot of switches out there and most of them will fit the keyboard because it supports 3 and 5-pin. I personally like Boba U4 silent tactile switches.

    I’m not sure about the keycaps. Keychron’s website also mentioned that their RGB works with OEM or Cherry profile keycaps, but I’m not sure if they have a specific layout on the bottom row that you need to take into consideration.

      • asqapro@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        That’s correct about the red / brown / blue.

        For your keyboard there’s no major difference between 3-pin and 5-pin switches, but for other keyboards (or rather the PCBs within other keyboards) it does matter. You can use a 3-pin switch on a 5-pin PCB, but you can’t use a 5-pin switch on a 3-pin PCB (technically you can clip off 2 plastic pins on a 5-pin switch and it would work with a 3-pin PCB).

        The 5-pin switches do offer extra stability versus 3-pin switches, but it’s not a big difference.

        The most important part of picking a switch is deciding your favorite between linear vs tactile vs clicky, then narrowing down based on other factors like spring weight and mushiness. You can do that through trial and error or by looking up reviews / information about switches. I still recommend getting a switch tester / sampler, but you can also check out ThereminGoat’s reviews at: https://github.com/ThereminGoat/switch-scores.

  • HidingCat@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Keycaps are easy, anything MX compatible (which is like most of them) will work. Since the V6 is a 100% it’s even easier, since it’s a standard layout and you don’t need to look for extended keycap sets that have keys to correspond to certain layout types.

    Switches you need to just bite the bullet every now and then. A tester only will get you so far. Expect to make a few regretful purchases from time to time.

      • HidingCat@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        The 4 icons are just for you to customise with.

        Double legends are meaningless on a fully programmable keyboard. Just use VIA and take a screenshot of your layers if you’re worried about forgetting.

  • The_Sasswagon@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    As the others have said, a tester can be really helpful, especially when trying to figure out what all the different terms mean that people throw around online.

    I currently have Novel Keys Cream (linear/smooth) switches on my main keyboard, cherry browns (tactile) on another for work, and jade box switches (clicky) on a little project board I made for when I want to feel the click in my bones.

    I’d recommend trying any of them, though personally I find the most variation in linear and clicky switches and I never found a tactile switch that felt different enough to me to justify the price.

    Enjoy the new keyboard!

  • curiousaur@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been rocking the keychron k3, the low profile one. Got it with brown switches and I think they’re perfect.

  • Zorind@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Once you find a style of switch that you like, I’ve gotten some from https://drop.com when they were on sale for a decent price.

    I’ve also had success with switches from https://kono.store

    I think usually you can find switches usually sold in groups of 10, 35, or 70 depending on where you get them, and the price per switch can vary pretty heavily, anywhere from like 50¢ per switch to a couple dollars per switch.

    I would highly recommend sampling a switch style or exact switch if possible before buying, though I have bought switches without doing that (after watching YouTube videos on them) and been mostly happy.

  • sudo pacman -Syu@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    You should choose some keycap from brand GMK, JTK, Keykobo, PBTfans, EPBT. For switchers, start with entry, easy to find brand like Gateron, KTT. They are good brand, also if you want to save some money, you can buy used keycaps, and switches, the quality doesn’t drop.

  • hoch@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    As for switches, I bought a cheap sample kit from Amazon to test a few of them, it was incredibly helpful as someone new to mechanical keyboards.

  • synapse3252@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I’m not 100% confident around 100% keyboards, but it seems to me like a standard 100%/full-size layout. You’d want to find keycaps that say that they are for 100% or full-size layouts. It looks like their website lists those as “Full Set Keycaps”. If you have any other questions, lmk! I’d be happy to answer