Instal Steam
login
|
bahasa
简体中文 (Tionghoa Sederhana)
繁體中文 (Tionghoa Tradisional)
日本語 (Bahasa Jepang)
한국어 (Bahasa Korea)
ไทย (Bahasa Thai)
Български (Bahasa Bulgaria)
Čeština (Bahasa Ceko)
Dansk (Bahasa Denmark)
Deutsch (Bahasa Jerman)
English (Bahasa Inggris)
Español - España (Bahasa Spanyol - Spanyol)
Español - Latinoamérica (Bahasa Spanyol - Amerika Latin)
Ελληνικά (Bahasa Yunani)
Français (Bahasa Prancis)
Italiano (Bahasa Italia)
Magyar (Bahasa Hungaria)
Nederlands (Bahasa Belanda)
Norsk (Bahasa Norwegia)
Polski (Bahasa Polandia)
Português (Portugis - Portugal)
Português-Brasil (Bahasa Portugis-Brasil)
Română (Bahasa Rumania)
Русский (Bahasa Rusia)
Suomi (Bahasa Finlandia)
Svenska (Bahasa Swedia)
Türkçe (Bahasa Turki)
Tiếng Việt (Bahasa Vietnam)
Українська (Bahasa Ukraina)
Laporkan kesalahan penerjemahan
Worse case scenario you can replace the switches. I have done some repairs to a STRAFE once, they are quite easy to dissasemble.
Take off the keycaps
Then get some isopropyl and keycaps the sticky switches and press the keys a bunch of times to remove anything that's stuck. Pour any excess isopropyl out and leave it toissu (PROPERLY.)
Isopropyl will leave nothing behind when it's dried.
That should fix the issue, if not then you'd have to take the keyboard apart and replace the switches.
Though I think corsair solders their switches to the PCB, so you'd have to be handy with a soldering iron.
Oh, sorry, little issue I have with Steam app, if I go back to type anything on a previous sentence it ♥♥♥♥♥ up one of the words.
What was meant to be said there was ''Leave it to dry (PROPERLY.)'' Sorry for any confusion.
Yes, Isopropyl will dry very fast (if you have 70%), so it won't take that long, but if it's pooled up, it'll take a while to dry, so yeah, turn it upsidedown and leave it for half a day or overnight.
Then after that's done, test the switch again and see if it's sticky / not the same as the others.
Yes, the switches are very resistant to liquids, well, ones that aren't sticky like cola or beer, lmao.
A switch just consists of 3 plastic pieces, a spring, and 2 copper fins that touch.
While Isopropyl (and water, what it's usually mixed with) isn't very (electrically) conductive it could still cause issues, so don't plug it in until it's properly dry.