I would use a dremel to ground it down
That should work great good luck with the mod ! P.S: take it easy and gradually, the plastic may melt and make some hard to remove traces or deform the keycap, so donāt go on the stem all the way down in one round.
I wonder if you could use a thin metal wire sufficiently heated to cut right through the stem(s) cleanly.
Great idea!
I might give it a try
Oh man I was really thinking about buying this set, I am a little glad I did not, too many issues for me. Would rather stick to Signature Plastics for SA, they have a few QC issues, but nothing to that extent.
So now drop are offering me a 20$ partial refund
TBH Iām afraid Iād mess up the key and be left with nothing
Did you try the hot water method ?
They donāt like to really fix problems. They pull this partial refund trash all the time.
I might
A bit afraid itāll deform more than just the stem
Yepp, which is against their terms of service
Didnāt work
Dremel and plastic welder, might be your best option.
How I would do it.
-
Cut out the stem from one of the switches, that you donāt use. Try to keep the key surface intact, so there is a hole only on one side of the stem. Note: you could also leave some of the keycap surface as a flange, to increase the bonding surface area.
-
Use a carbide bit, to grind the twisted stem out of the N key.
-
Use a hobby knife, to score the top of the donor stem and the inside of the keycap.
-
Place the donor stem on the desired key switch.
-
Clean with Isopropyl Alcohol
-
Mix up a pea sized amount of plastic welder (Permetex, is my go to brand. Iāve used it on PlayStation 3 controllers and Sony Headphones, which I think are made of ABS, among other things.)
-
Apply a small amount to the mating surface donor stem (Donāt want to over do it , because you could risk it leaking out and getting in the key switch, then the position the key cap on the donor stem. Note: The key cap will probably sit a little higher then normal.
-
Remove the keycap, and shave the stem down, with the carbide bit or buy twisting it on a pice of sand paper, until the keycap sits at the same height as the other keycaps. Note: If the hole in the stem doesnāt go deep enough, you may need to surgically remove some of the material. A small diamond bit, drill bit, or carbide bitās would probably do the trick.
Hope that helps.
So after rereading this, your going to spend a lot more then $20 to fix that one keycap, if you donāt already have the tools / bitsā¦
If I was in your boat, didnāt like to tinker, and or didnāt already having the tools, Iād probably just take a unused key from that row, and use it in place of the Nā¦
Whatās the texture like? SP are that nice shiny plastic, and while I like Maxkey quality I find the plastic a big textured and dull-ish. Iām looking for some colors that arenāt available from SP right now and I want to give Domikey a shot. Are the keys smooth and bright, or more rough/dull like Maxkey?
Domikeyās SA were a very thin / soft mat finish, like the SP SA keycaps, IIRC.