Anybody selling an IBM Space saving Keyboard (SSK)?
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- Location: TEXAS USA
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: -
The IBM SSK is such a BASED keyboard, but there is only one person selling a US version for $200. Does anybody out there have an IBM SSK that they're willing to sell for less than $200 USD?
Last edited by Cherryisgarbage on 17 Nov 2018, 20:54, edited 1 time in total.
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- Location: Berlin
- Main keyboard: Matias Quiet Mini w/blue ALPS
- Main mouse: Microsoft Intellimouse Optical 1.0
- Favorite switch: complicated ALPS
- DT Pro Member: -
Why so mean? Just cause you sell your stuff at horrendous prices there is nothing bad with asking for a fair deal. There were SSK auctions ending for around 120$ and currently 175-200$ is fair for a non restored SSK in the USA imo. So why not buy from someone in the community rather than buying from some random ebay guy?
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- Location: --
- Main keyboard: --
- Main mouse: --
- Favorite switch: --
- DT Pro Member: -
Hey man that's shitty to say
- snacksthecat
- ✶✶✶✶
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: SSK
- Main mouse: BenQ ZOWIE EC1-A
- DT Pro Member: 0205
- Contact:
True! I would gladly sell my SSK for $200 to this guy if I wasn't so in love with it.hansichen wrote:Why so mean? Just cause you sell your stuff at horrendous prices there is nothing bad with asking for a fair deal. There were SSK auctions ending for around 120$ and currently 175-200$ is fair for a non restored SSK in the USA imo. So why not buy from someone in the community rather than buying from some random ebay guy?
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- Location: TEXAS USA
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: -
Okay guys, I get it, this guy's a dick, but can everybody stop talking about this and just reply If you find one for sale or want to sell one?haha, that's a good one! why not 'for less than $20'? And don't forget to ask for a free G80-5000 while you're negotiating the final price...get outa here! ;p
- Laser
- emacs -nw
- Location: Romania
- Main keyboard: Plum TKL \w Topre domes (work) / Novatouch (home)
- DT Pro Member: 0180
Probably he means it's a basic keyboard, ... and he also seems somewhat entitled to own one. I can suggest a "normal" IBM Model M? I mean, it's better than basic, and at the same time, cheaper!
- snacksthecat
- ✶✶✶✶
- Location: USA
- Main keyboard: SSK
- Main mouse: BenQ ZOWIE EC1-A
- DT Pro Member: 0205
- Contact:
It's teenager speak for "cool"
I'd say these days are over. Here is a good condition one with cable:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/253817948421
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- Location: land of the rusty beamsprings
- DT Pro Member: -
He is not, it just that the younger people have forgotten what smiley are actually used for ;P
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- Location: Berlin
- Main keyboard: Matias Quiet Mini w/blue ALPS
- Main mouse: Microsoft Intellimouse Optical 1.0
- Favorite switch: complicated ALPS
- DT Pro Member: -
obviously some of you guys aren't used to sarcasm. Look it up in the dictionary.
yea, right, my prices are horrendous, but $170-$200 for a board some dude probably pulled out of a garbage can is fair and square...X( Sorry, but I can't wrap my head around the logic behind that, if there is any.
- zrrion
- Location: United States
- Main keyboard: F122
- Main mouse: Microsoft IntelliMouse
- Favorite switch: ALPS SKCC Cream
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
If you can't wrap your head around it then youre going to have to start checking garbage cans instead of eBay.
- fohat
- Elder Messenger
- Location: Knoxville, Tennessee, USA
- Main keyboard: Model F 122-key terminal
- Main mouse: Microsoft Optical Mouse
- Favorite switch: Model F Buckling Spring
- DT Pro Member: 0158
In a free market the definition of a fair price is what the highest bidder is willing to pay for something today.
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- Location: TEXAS USA
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: -
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- Location: TEXAS USA
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: -
wow... I can't even comprehend the level of mindfuckery needed to make an argument for something like this. Just because somebody threw out an old keyboard because they didn't know how much it is worth. the people who make these kind of arguments are the same people who say "yogurt is just old milk" or "diamonds are worthless, they're used on table saws." fuck off and thanks for ruining this thread.mind_prepared wrote: obviously some of you guys aren't used to sarcasm. Look it up in the dictionary.
yea, right, my prices are horrendous, but $170-$200 for a board some dude probably pulled out of a garbage can is fair and square...X( Sorry, but I can't wrap my head around the logic behind that, if there is any.
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- Location: TEXAS USA
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: -
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- Location: TEXAS USA
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: -
- madrobby
- Location: Tucson, AZ
- DT Pro Member: -
Well, you can likely get one for $5...
...if you spend two years going to at least one garage sale and flea market a week and are super lucky.
Or you can buy one for the going rate online. And fwiw it’s possible (and even likely) that prices will eventually go down again.
That said, you can get lucky on eBay as well, especially if you’re willing to buy a bundle of stuff. I recently acquired a SSK in good working order as part of a computer (PS/2 Model 25), for about $200 total. Note that I snagged this up a few minutes after it was listed, so you need to invest time to set up searches, monitor them and be really quick when something eventually shows up. I’m using an app called “BayWatch” for iOS that can give you near real-time alerts on listed items, but it’s only worth it when you’re a collector of something (it’s $25/year).
And yet another way: go to meetups, both mechanical keyboards people and to vintage computer stuff (e.g. VCF East and West in the US) and make friends. Perhaps someone sometime will trade a board with you, or has an extra one that they want in good hands and not some eBay rando.
TL;DR for highly sought-after items you need to invest time or money to get them, and sometimes you need both.
...if you spend two years going to at least one garage sale and flea market a week and are super lucky.
Or you can buy one for the going rate online. And fwiw it’s possible (and even likely) that prices will eventually go down again.
That said, you can get lucky on eBay as well, especially if you’re willing to buy a bundle of stuff. I recently acquired a SSK in good working order as part of a computer (PS/2 Model 25), for about $200 total. Note that I snagged this up a few minutes after it was listed, so you need to invest time to set up searches, monitor them and be really quick when something eventually shows up. I’m using an app called “BayWatch” for iOS that can give you near real-time alerts on listed items, but it’s only worth it when you’re a collector of something (it’s $25/year).
And yet another way: go to meetups, both mechanical keyboards people and to vintage computer stuff (e.g. VCF East and West in the US) and make friends. Perhaps someone sometime will trade a board with you, or has an extra one that they want in good hands and not some eBay rando.

TL;DR for highly sought-after items you need to invest time or money to get them, and sometimes you need both.
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- Location: TEXAS USA
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: -
wow... I can't even comprehend the level of mindfuckery needed to make an argument for something like this. Just because somebody threw out an old keyboard because they didn't know how much it is worth doesn't mean it is worthless. the people who make these kind of arguments are the same people who say "yogurt is just old milk" or "diamonds are worthless, they're used on table saws." fuck off and thanks for ruining this thread.mind_prepared wrote: obviously some of you guys aren't used to sarcasm. Look it up in the dictionary.
yea, right, my prices are horrendous, but $170-$200 for a board some dude probably pulled out of a garbage can is fair and square...X( Sorry, but I can't wrap my head around the logic behind that, if there is any.
Last edited by Cherryisgarbage on 18 Nov 2018, 17:53, edited 1 time in total.
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- Location: TEXAS USA
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: -
Thanks for the advicemadrobby wrote: Well, you can likely get one for $5...
...if you spend two years going to at least one garage sale and flea market a week and are super lucky.
Or you can buy one for the going rate online. And fwiw it’s possible (and even likely) that prices will eventually go down again.
That said, you can get lucky on eBay as well, especially if you’re willing to buy a bundle of stuff. I recently acquired a SSK in good working order as part of a computer (PS/2 Model 25), for about $200 total. Note that I snagged this up a few minutes after it was listed, so you need to invest time to set up searches, monitor them and be really quick when something eventually shows up. I’m using an app called “BayWatch” for iOS that can give you near real-time alerts on listed items, but it’s only worth it when you’re a collector of something (it’s $25/year).
And yet another way: go to meetups, both mechanical keyboards people and to vintage computer stuff (e.g. VCF East and West in the US) and make friends. Perhaps someone sometime will trade a board with you, or has an extra one that they want in good hands and not some eBay rando.
TL;DR for highly sought-after items you need to invest time or money to get them, and sometimes you need both.

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- Location: Berlin
- Main keyboard: Matias Quiet Mini w/blue ALPS
- Main mouse: Microsoft Intellimouse Optical 1.0
- Favorite switch: complicated ALPS
- DT Pro Member: -
heh, that was totally my point, too. The thread starter has an attitude problem and no sense of humor, apparently. He wants a super rare item - but he doesn't want to spend a lot of time on hunting down a board at a reasonable price, he wants others to make offers, which, generally speaking, is never the way to go if you're trying to save a buck or two. And when the futility of his attempt is pointed out to him, he gets all wound up and starts bitching around. Sheesh, have patience and stay on the look out and you'll find a good deal at some point sooner or later - much more likely than a good deal finding you, imho. Nuff said.
- stratokaster
- Location: Dublin, Ireland
- Main keyboard: Filco Minila Air
- Main mouse: Contour Unimouse WL / Apple Magic Trackpad 2
- Favorite switch: Alps SKCM Green
- DT Pro Member: -
- Contact:
Apparently I missed the point when this place became just a division of Reddit 

- Dingster
- Location: Slovenia
- Main keyboard: Novatouch
- Main mouse: MX518
- DT Pro Member: -
- DatOtherJosh
- Location: United States
- Main mouse: HV-MS672
- Favorite switch: Alps SMCM brown
- DT Pro Member: -
get one from Xianyu (a second hand site under taobao), 200 should be just enough for the keyboard and shipping
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- Location: TEXAS USA
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: -
on which post? what you said was:
saying that I was asking for a keyboard for too cheap, even though I found a listing online for $200 and other users have found it for less.
saying that your prices are fair and that somehow because something was found in the trash means it is worthless, which is the exact opposite of what madrobby said.
I am willing to spend more time and money finding it, otherwise I would just buy a model M, and wouldn't even bother posting here. I don't know what the point of this board is if letting other people make offers is bad. am I just supposed to tell them to sell it at the price I want?mind_prepared wrote: The thread starter has an attitude problem and no sense of humor, apparently. He wants a super rare item - but he doesn't want to spend a lot of time on hunting down a board at a reasonable price, he wants others to make offers, which, generally speaking, is never the way to go if you're trying to save a buck or two. And when the futility of his attempt is pointed out to him, he gets all wound up and starts bitching around. Sheesh, have patience and stay on the look out and you'll find a good deal at some point sooner or later - much more likely than a good deal finding you, imho. Nuff said.
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- Location: TEXAS USA
- Favorite switch: Buckling spring
- DT Pro Member: -