this post was submitted on 16 Aug 2023
95 points (99.0% liked)

ErgoMechKeyboards

5941 readers
1 users here now

Ergonomic, split and other weird keyboards

Rules

Keep it ergo

Posts must be of/about keyboards that have a clear delineation between the left and right halves of the keyboard, column stagger, or both. This includes one-handed (one half doesn't exist, what clearer delineation is that!?)

i.e. no regular non-split¹ row-stagger and no non-split¹ ortholinear²

¹ split meaning a separation of the halves, whether fixed in place or entirely separate, both are fine.
² ortholinear meaning keys layed out in a grid

No Spam

No excessive posting/"shilling" for commercial purposes. Vendors are permitted to promote their products/services but keep it to a minimum and use the [vendor] flair. Posts that appear to be marketing without being transparent about it will be removed.

No Buy/Sell/Trade

This subreddit is not a marketplace, please post on r/mechmarket or other relevant marketplace.

Some useful links

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
95
Heron v1 (i.postimg.cc)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by sneftel@lemmy.world to c/ergomechkeyboards@lemmy.world
 

Main view

Introducing Heron, a Dactyl-inspired columnar keyboard with each column mounted on a laser-cut acrylic scaffold.

Frontal view

With this keeb, I wanted to get as far away as possible from the "big plastic brick" look of the Dactyl. I was inspired by the Glove80's sleek look and in particular by its "hey, just bend the FR4!" construction, but I wanted staggered columns and a more "weightless" look and I was sick of flat thumb clusters slowing me down.

Rear view

The columns are 0.8mm FR4 PCBs screwed into 8mm acrylic; FFC ribbons run down the back legs, and diodes are on the mainboard.

Top view

Column positioning is essentially stolen from a Dactyl, with an extra partial row at the top so that I could use the same 4x1 PCB for each column. (It's a 3x6 at heart.) I'm quite proud of the thumb clusters, though, which are inspired by the DataHand: wrapping around the thumb, with a heel-toe motion for the middle, makes it quick and easy to press virtually any combination of keys, and thumb travel is so much less than the flat Manuform cluster.

More pics at https://postimg.cc/gallery/Vwfqb1Q

Video of the thumb cluster in use at https://youtube.com/shorts/eb4dZot1eeI

Everything's open source, because why not, but the files are in a moderately execrable state right now (particularly the main case, which I designed while [and, honestly, before] learning FreeCAD). Repo at https://github.com/Sneftel/heron .

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] RudolpsWings@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The base looks bigger than a 250mm print area, is it smaller than it looks or so you have a giant printer?

[–] sneftel@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I don’t have a giant resin printer, but Elecrow does. They also did the laser cutting and the PCBs. Not the quickest turnaround in the world but they do good work and their prices are remarkably low.

[–] wjrii@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

The Good+Cheap pair from the "pick two" cliche gets overlooked. :-)

Beautiful work, btw. The people who want it will REALLY want it.