this post was submitted on 24 Oct 2023
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Mechanical Keyboards
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It's likely fixable. It might need some switches replaced, or there might be some damaged circuit board connections or traces that could be re-soldered or bypassed. I think any fix is going to require soldering, and maybe a multimeter. Whether fixing it is cheaper than buying a new board depends on whether you can borrow tools, and the cost of replacement switches if you need those.
I know the switches are not hot-swappable, but you can de-solder switches on just about any mechanical keyboard. Add a solder sucker to your tools list if you need to do that. There are guides online for replacing keys on the specific board you have.
More details would be helpful for diagnosing the problem:
Given that Razor's a "gaming company", it might have N-key rollover, might not use a matrix encoder.
googles
Nope. Looks like their Huntsman models do have N-key rollover, but not the Blackwidow line.
Thanks for looking that up! I could be wrong, but I think that boards with N-key rollover generally do use a matrix but with the addition of diodes to prevent ghosting. (Details on Deskthority.) The only designs I've seen that don't use a matrix are small split boards with fewer two dozen keys per side/controller where it's practical to get a controller with enough IO pins to use a separate pin for each key.
Thanks, looks like that is correct.