Submitted by Rare_Acanthaceae5890 t3_y5cinx in MechanicalKeyboards
TL;DR: I’m getting frustrated with the general scarcity of MK related stuff and made up prices. How do you cope?
Hey, I’ve been reading learning and following IG pages about mechanical keyboards for around 3 months.
Every time I see a cool custom built piece in a post I then go and look for the parts online and this is what I don’t get…
- A lot of brands don’t have an oficial website. And then you’re lost in a sea of third party sellers/websites that look quite shady.
- Everything seems to be out of stock all the time.
- Some cases have a high price for simple aluminium. I do not get this. I feel dumb not understanding this but it’s just aluminium.
- Are things really worth their price of is it just fabricated scarcity?
These have taken some of the fun I was expecting to have as I don’t find it entertaining to collect “almost-impossible-to-get”/“waiting-forever-to-get-it” things in anything in my life, lol.
So I settled for buying an epomaker th80 and will eventually experiment with some switches and keycaps. Even painting the actual case of the keyboard if I get bored. But now I feel limited to whatever I can find available on Amazon for fast availability and shipping
It would be nice to hear how you manage to have fun with the limitations I mentioned above or whether I’m wrong.
_vastrox_ t1_isix2rb wrote
That's why you won't necessarily find a website for all those names.
CNC machining is extremely expensive, especially for low-volume production like it's usually done with keyboards like this.
And even raw aluminium prices are currently through the roof due to the ongoing economical problems.
But most of the smaller lesser known groupbuys are absolutely realistic prices.
As mentioned CNC machining for low volume production is expensive af and mass production is just not reasonable for a product that has such a small niche market.
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If you want fast availability and shipping the super high-end boutique keyboards aren't for you.
Those are more something for collectors that have patience and no problem with waiting for a product for a year to get something unique.
And you honestly don't have to get one of those if you just want to build a good custom keyboard.
There are quite a few easily available options now that are still very much high-end.
This hobby has seen a rapid growth over the past two years and there are quite a few vendors that produce boards now that are good quality and usually in stock (or at least restocked frequently).
KBDfans, Keychron and Cannonkeys for example all have several beginner oriented keyboard series (both alu and plastic) that are easily available.