





Restoring a dg Keyboard The most popular keyboard used with a digital group computer was the dg model KEY-1 capacitive keyboard made by Maxi-Switch. This is a nice keyboard, good feel, durable, and very importantly: Restorable! This is important since the design of the keyboard included foam under each key that turns to sticky dust after these many years!

Fully restored and working perfectly!



The keyboard is probably the most difficult of all digital group items to restore. Hundreds of parts must be removed. cleaned, or rebuilt. The key plungers must be carefully disassembled and the gold foil that makes the capacitive key 'contact' must be cleaned and remounted to the plunger with new foam. Here are a few photos of the restoration of two of my keyboards, and a few tips on how to do your own. Enjoy.



Typical keyboard before restoration



Keyboard in poor shape



Pulling the keys



Documenting the custom labeling



Spring under keycap



Attachment of the ribbon cable



Using a small screwdriver to pry off keys



All the keys removed



Crumbly foam under each key

The parts pile



Stripped board



Close-up of the unclean contact area

Disassembly and Cleaning keyboard.pdf contains an exploded view of the keyboard that can be used as a guide for disassembly. Be careful not to scratch the finished parts! You may find it a good idea to take notes during the disassembly to ease in reassembly, and to work in an area that will not be disturbed until the restoration is complete. Watch out for kids! The springs and keys are irresistible to young ones--I learned this from experience. :)



Keyboard layout The keycaps pull straight off, and originally, a square piece of plastic held the spring in place, this also pulls straight off--I have never seen a keyboard that had all of them intact. I have no idea why, perhaps they were not installed on all keys. Also note that the springs are not all the same--they are color coded for stiffness, but since I cannot be certain that someone before me has not jumbled them, I cannot say for certain which keys had a particular color. My guess is that the more often used keys (black keys, e, s, etc.) had the stiffer springs (reds and yellows). After disassembly, I strip the keyboard down as shown in the photos, and wash everything in a mild dish soap with a toothbrush. The plungers get washed AFTER the foam/foil pads have been removed, as discussed in the next section. Yes, I wash the PC board the same way, taking precautions to avoid static electricity along the way. Everything is dried completely with compressed air before doing anything else. Generally speaking, water does not damage electronic components or boards unless the water cannot escape, and is allowed to sit. I blow the water off with compressed air and then place the PC board on a towel in an oven at the lowest possible temperature, usually around 150 degrees, for an hour or two with the door just cracked open to the first self-hold point. The heat pulls the humidity out of the air and dries the board completely.

Plunger Prep The plunger with attached foam and foil is the main focus of this whole restoration. Look at the photos, unless a keyboard was preserved in some sort of fantastic time capsule, the foam will crumble with great ease. The gold foil must be pulled slowly and carefully from the plunger, taking great care not to tear the foil. A razor knife is used to scrap the remaining foam from the plunger. The foam clinging to the foil is a little harder to deal with. I have tried numerous ways of cleaning the foil, and the best thing I have found is to just "dust" the foam off of the foil with a soft tooth brush. The sticky backing on the foil seems to strengthen the foil pads. Other cleaning methods I have tried that removed the sticky goo backing altogether, allowed (caused?) the foil to curl and tear much easier. This is bad--just leave the goo--trust me on this! I've done many of these. A destroyed or missing foil square can be replaced with plain aluminum foil, but this is not preferred. This alters the design from a capacitive keyboard to an electrical contact keyboard, it seems to work fine, but the foil is far less durable, and I suspect that in time, it may lead to more trouble.



Crumbling foam After separating and cleaning the foil and plungers, we are ready for the next step. I roll out a couple feet of double-stick mounting tape (available from the local WalMart store), and lay across my work table sticky side up. I use masking or clear tape to hold each of the ends down to the table top so the tape lays flat. Then I place each of the foil squares side-by-side with a pair of tweezers, close but not touching, until I run out of room. Next, I cut each foam/foil square from the strip with a razor knife by laying a metal rule along each edge, and cutting in one careful stroke. (This will damage your table top, use a work surface you are free to damage!) Repeat until all squares are done. After all the foam/foil squares are cut free, I use the razor knife to notch them to fit the plungers as in the photo below. The center hole is recreated with a simple hole punch as seen below. Others have asked me if there might be an easier way to do this. I have tried many ways, scissors can take the place of the razor knife to separate the squares with good results, but they tend to clog with foam goo after a while. I have got to the point where I just use the knife. I also tried a specialized notching tool from a scrapbooking store, but it clogged with goo after just a couple squares, and quit working. The hole punch will also clog, but it continues to work with only occasional cleaning. I know one collector who actually had a die made especially to do this--could be a good route to go, but at greater expense. The notches are really not that critical though; they serve to keep the foam from getting in the way of the plunger guides, and as long as they do that, all should be fine After the foam/foil squares are cut, trimmed, and notched, you will notice that they resemble little pillows--all smashed down around the edges. This is not good. After some experimentation, I found a good solution: dip a small modeling paint brush in "Goof-Off" (available at The Home Depot), and with the moist (not wet) brush, stroke along the edges of the compressed foam. The foam will spring back to form like magic. I let the foam dry a while--maybe five or ten minutes, before peeling off the paper backing and sticking to the plunger. I have found that this works best. Interestingly, if you let the foam dry too long (more than about a half-hour) they are much harder get the paper backing to peel off. Not a huge problem, but noteworthy.



Replacement foam--from Walmart

Recreating the foam

The foam needs a center hole

Cutting and punching out little foam pillows

About ten minutes of work each

Restored plunger and foam. Pretty, ain't it?



Cabinet Restoration I have done several of these, and every one has been different from the others in the scope of work needed to bring the cabinet back to that shiny new look I love. On one of my keyboards, I had to strip all the paint from the tan U-shaped cover in order to be able to do a weld repair. I have mentioned elsewhere on this site that I had to learn aluminum welding to do other cabinet repairs, and those self-taught skills have come in handy for keyboard repairs. They seem to take a lot of abuse! The cover also required a good deal of light dent pounding on an anvil with a metal working hammer to smooth out a few years worth of abuse. After these repairs, the cover was belt sanded to restore a consistent finish. The painted finish was restored by priming with self etching primer (a must-do before painting aluminum!) and then intentionally splattering thick paint on the cover by removing the spray nozzle of my compressed air sprayer, and modulating the spay with my finger. What a mess. Trust me. It's harder to do than it is to explain. Again, this is a self taught technique that may have no similarity to how it is done commercially! After letting the splatter paint dry, I repainted the cover with a fine mist of color matched paint. The worst of the aluminum front covers (the one with key cutouts and nice silk-screening) I have restored, was done by airbrushing matched paint in light coats over the entire surface. Removing the paint after each coat from the silk screen area with a Q-tip, tightly wrapped, and barely moist with thinner. A light coat of clear enamel sealed the finish. Fortunately, this worked terrifically, in spite of the goofy technique. Lots of practice and restarts! The paint covered an original anodized surface, so this actually changed the original finish from anodized to painted. Since I have several of these keyboards with a painted surface as factory original, I did not see this as much of a compromise. The other possibility I entertained was to simply re-anodize the cover. I found a local shop willing to do the work for me, but they required a significant charge for the odd brown color, and although the experts there thought it a good chance that the silk screening would survive the process, there were no assurances. So had I gone that route, it may have been necessary to redo the silk screening, and I thought it better to try painting it first. I'm glad I did! I have done other silk screened surfaces since with similar results, so I'm sticking with it for now! The bare aluminum bottom cover was restored by cleaning and then using a rotary steel wire brush in a drill to lay down a nice smooth-ish, consistent surface. This works beautifully. Not as easy to do as sanding, but this uneven surface does not lend itself to sanding. This technique is VERY time consuming, and must be done with a fresh, but broken-in steel wire brush. Well that's it--wish I had taken some pics of the metal work, but since I work alone, this is sometimes forgotten--I kick myself. Oh well, I'll be doing this again one day. --Pictures coming soon!!! :)