Perixx PX-1900 乇乂丅尺卂 丅卄工匚匚 Scissor Switch Keyboard Review

Spearra

06 Oct 2018, 09:35

The "Perixx PX-1900" is a gaming scissor switch keyboard by a company called, well, Perixx. They're based in Germany along with their designs. But actual manufacturing takes place in China. Keep that warranty nearby now! Now back to Perixx. Perixx's goal is to basically make high quality products at a low price. Not unlike "KLIM" actually. However Perixx also has office oriented options like built in touchpads/trackballs, a IBM Model M shaped keyboard that apparently feels like Cherry MX Brown, etc. They've almost seen it all. I have one of their external industrial touchpads and I at the time I was curious to see what else they had. I eventually stumbled across a gaming scissor switch keyboard on their website called the PX-1900. Looked that shit up on Amazon US immediately. It is $39.99 USD on Amazon US. Please note that before we go on, these sell out fairly fast, and while sold out, alternative sellers/scalpers will sell these keyboards for ghastly inflated prices. We're talking around $70 USD here. Whenever that happens, just wait for Perixx themselves to restock their Amazon wares. Its a stellar keyboard, but one of its pros is the sub-$50 (USD) price. For that price, you get a keyboard that has a very good build quality, and that build quality has earned the PX-1900 a small cult following. Heck, that's what got me interested in it when I read the Amazon reviews for them. They all were unanimous that the build quality was insane. I was skeptical, but after abusing this keyboard with a obscene amount of Typeracer and osu! Standard and osu! 9k Mania, I came to the conclusion everyone else did, that being the build quality lives up to it's hype!

Now I'm about to make a strange comparison right now. I've noticed traits of this keyboard that seem to be shared with that of a pistol. That being the "Highpoint 45." pistol. The Perixx PX-1900 is basically the HIghpoint 45. of the (scissor switch) keyboard world. Its super thick for its respective class/type, built almost too well for what they are meant to do, and pretty much all of the people who criticize them tended to have never actually used one to begin with. Much like Krabby Patties.

As for that thickness, the scissor switches are a obscenely thick 3.8 mm. Which in the context of scissor switches, is hilariously thick! The keycaps aren't chicklets/island/chocolate/flat keycaps either!
Side rant: Chicklets and scissor switches are NOT interchangeable terms. Its like membranes and rubber domes. Both are independent factors that just simply tend to end up together. Saying its a chicklet switch keyboard is like saying a Red Dragon is a PBT switch keyboard, or like saying "that keyboard has Cherry MX Red keycaps".
With that rant out of the way, here's what the plastic switch plate looks like:
https://imgur.com/ivJBMWE
https://imgur.com/S6RonMD

Now notice the keycaps. They are actually slightly contoured/curved, plus a good amount of space in between the keys. So touch typing doesn't feel like you're tapping a piece of paper with legends written on it, and you can actually feel what you're doing.

While we're on the topic of the parts of the keyboard, here's the insides/tear down. (This voids the warranty btw. Don't do this)

The rubber dome mat and the first membrane layer (note that they're attached to one another, so they're the "same layer"):
https://imgur.com/wn9o2bS
https://imgur.com/PnirURO
https://imgur.com/UA88fAs

Underneath the rubber-dome-mat/first-membrane-layer is the other membrane layer(s):
https://imgur.com/lgS3iwz
https://imgur.com/74zOxLO
https://imgur.com/8BnUL2u
https://imgur.com/xPdvEbF
https://imgur.com/Bl7aT9O
https://imgur.com/w5pgKP5

Underneath the other membrane layer(s):
https://imgur.com/NPnnmJT
oh look a metal plate!
https://imgur.com/TRLN7jA

Due to the metal plate, the keyboard doesn't flex a lot, and the keyboard feels very solid in use. Speaking of the feel, the scissor switches go down smoothly and lightly. But you still will get fatigued. "Wait what?" Now, while the downstroke is effortless and bottoming out isn't as violent as one would imagine, the upstroke/rebound is hilariously violent. It will smack your finger tips into the new year. This keyboard has the strange quirk that, if you happen to type too slowly, the switches "feel" very heavy. But if you peck at the keyboard fast (like a piano), it feels noticeably "lighter". It's a strange feeling to say the least. Another thing to note is that, you can press the top of the keys anywhere you'd like. No binding here. It also feels very consistent. For my abusive use in Typeracer and osu!, I really like it! It is by all means reliable.

It has a standard full sized ANSI layout, and the keys are not floating.
However two keys were replaced with two function keys. The keys replaced, are the "right windows key", and the "context menu key" to the right of the spacebar. They were replaced by the "Gear" function key, and the "FN" function key respectively. The Gear function key changes the backlighting color. These are the 7* colors you can use:
* Red
* Blue
* Green
* Pink
* Sky Blue
* Yellow
* Almost Actually White (; if you don't stare super hard, it's White)
Please note that the Num lock and the other lock light indicators are always red.
The legends themselves ARE backlit as well. All of the backlighting is very even with very little to no light bleeding onto the desk.

The FN function key managed the media keys on the F(insert # here) keys. Please note that this has limited compatibility with Mac. The volume media keys work, but everything else is a bit awkward and would advise against using the other ones on Mac.

Holding down the FN key then pressing the Gear key, and vice versa, will cause the keyboard cycle between the 7 colors in a breathing effect. You cannot change the brightness of this effect. You can change the brightness in the solid colors mode for the mentioned prior 7 colors. If I recall, it should be 100%, 75%, and 50% brightness respectively. It's 50% is my Bloody B975 keyboard's 100% brightness. For what that comparison is worth. So needless to say at 100%, even in the middle of the day, you can very well see the backlighting. Fun fact, the legends are actually readable even without the backlighting on! They basically just look like white legends on black keycaps when the backlighting is off. So if you don't need the backlighting on, don't worry, you can still see what'cha doing!

Aesthetically it is in between a office keyboard and a obscene gaming keyboard. They legends and the red trim on the sides scream "gaming". But not obnoxiously so. If the red trim wasn't there, I'd reckon it would just look like a regular office keyboard but with bold legends. The legends looks like what happens when you turn on "bold face" in a text editor. So unlike other gaming keyboards that have those weird "cut off letterings", the PX-1900 has actually completed legends that are readable. You know, what text is supposed to be.

The USB cable is standard. Not braided, not too thin, not too thick. Just a regular cable.

It weights about 2(ish) pounds; about (a) 0.91(ish) kilo.

Sound wise, it has the heat beat sound that scissor switch keyboards are known for. However, the "plastic sound" that you'd normally here in other scissor switch keyboards are not present here. Just the sound of the rubber dome thumping against the membrane over metal plate. Except the space bar. It sounds a little hollow. Still quiet, but might be annoying to certain people.

The flip out feet are rubber tipped:
https://imgur.com/yaGUQ4I
and the keyboard's bottom has rubber dots. Due to that metal plate and all of the rubber dots/tips, it doesn't move a whole lot unless you're really going green eggs and ham while gaming (or typing, or both).

I was going to have a section about cons, but due to how well executed this keyboard is, I legitimately can't even find much to nitpick about except for only one nitpick. The spacebar is hollow sounding. Its still quiet, but it is something to note. Overall the keyboard is pretty quiet though. As for any other "cons", pretty much everything boils down to personal preference.

All and all,
if you're in the market for a scissor switch keyboard that is reliable, extremely well built, backlit, anti-ghosting for days, and sub-$50 (USD), but doesn't use flat keycaps, this is for you! Oh, and its rated for about 30 million key strokes/presses. And no I wasn't paid to do this. I'm just slightly annoyed that this keyboard phantoms out if you try to look for scissor switch (gaming) keyboards, everything else shows up BUT this keyboard. Odds are if you found a post about it, its probably from me. I was going to do this in a video format but I do not have the hard drive storage space, or the money to get more storage space. That and I don't have the time to edit a full scale review. So for now, hopefully this gets the message out to those people who really loves their scissor switches but couldn't find a decent one.
As for alternatives, the "Cougar Vantar" is about $10 (USD) cheaper than the PX-1900, but so is it's quality. The "BFKB113PBK" is high quality, but the price is equally as high at a over $100+ (USD) tag. The BFKB113PBK is from a Japanese company. Japan and their expensive rubber dome keyboards! Any other "gaming scissor switch" keyboards on the market don't really hold a candle to these three. For general use I recommend the PX-1900 due to it's combination of a stellar built quality and it won't murder your wallet/bank-account/funds. (Logickeyboard and Logitech I'm looking at you!)

Before anyone asks, yes you can use it to play Taiko!

Should you get a defective keyboard, remember that they have warranties! Anyway, have a good one, and I'm off to sleep because it is 12 AM where I'm at! (Accidentally middle clicked this tab before I saved a draft, so I had to retype all of what I could remember, WHOOPSY :!: )

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Muirium
µ

06 Oct 2018, 10:24

Fancy inlining all those images? Use the img tag in the editor.

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stratokaster

06 Oct 2018, 10:33

Looks like a relatively interesting rubber dome/scissor switch keyboard, although it's kinda amazing that this review has many pics of rubber domes from various angles, but exactly zero photos of the keyboard itself :-)

Findecanor

06 Oct 2018, 16:31

A scissor switch with a throw of 3.8 mm sounds interesting. I have long wondered if such a long throw would be possible with scissors. I think many mechanical switches are as high as they are because they need to be stabilised, but with scissors maybe they could be made smaller. Would be interesting to try out and dissect.

I didn't know Perixx had keyboards. I knew them for their vertical mice: many types, some of which look the same as other brands' and probably OEM:ed.
Spearra wrote: Now notice the keycaps. They are actually slightly contoured/curved, plus a good amount of space in between the keys. So touch typing doesn't feel like you're tapping a piece of paper with legends written on it, and you can actually feel what you're doing.
Because you did not post any pics of the outside of the keyboard, I went to Perixx's web site to see images there.
The keys don't look contoured, but rather flat, with the same keycap profile on every row.

Spearra

06 Oct 2018, 17:38

stratokaster wrote: Looks like a relatively interesting rubber dome/scissor switch keyboard, although it's kinda amazing that this review has many pics of rubber domes from various angles, but exactly zero photos of the keyboard itself :-)
Whoops! That's what I get for typing this overnight. Here's what a overhead view looks like, along with the keycaps contouring shape, and the seven backlighting options:

White: https://imgur.com/dm6SYre
Sky Blue: https://imgur.com/BNR6r9T
Purple: https://imgur.com/cKaDkEc
Red: https://imgur.com/WYp7cHm
Green: https://imgur.com/cj2wV0z
Blue: https://imgur.com/sxd1kEN
Yellow: https://imgur.com/E6wFpSN

Top of the keycaps: https://imgur.com/55ZaX2w
Side of the keycaps: https://imgur.com/fxW5nhZ
Bottom of the keycaps: https://imgur.com/p6St2xT

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