Man, I'm kind of relieved that I wasn't crazy about using the switch puller as a stab remover because it's still a cross with a tab. The funny thing about this method was that none of the people I talked to knew that you could do it this way; they always used tweezers or their bare hands.
On this particular kit, the stabilizers are what's called "plate mounted" which means it sits at the plate layer, making it easy to remove. Other keyboards may have stabs that are mounted to the PCB, which would require you to open the board up
you know, i'm not sure...let me ask them and see if they sell these separately I love how they look on their EK68 keyboard, but i agree, the set themselves look nice
So they responded back, and no they don't sell that set individually. They had recommended another purple keycap set but I looked at it and I don't think it'd fit your preference for simplistic lol it's a bit cluttered imo. So sorry!
@@keebtunes It’s okay, thank you for asking, and yeah I’ve been trying to find a similar one but haven’t been able to. Do you recommend any websites for keycaps?
It kind of depends on your style and budget? I typically source for clones if I need keycaps, cause I think high end keycaps are overpriced..temu and AliExpress have some really good sets of you know what to look for. Otherwise, I do like Akko's keycap sets
You might've had a decent one to start with, it happens sometimes! I've messed with several and they've all been kinda whack, but you know how it is with mass produced stuff - sometimes they come out well
You can just put them back in the same way that you take them out. Slide the bar and top end of the stabilizers in first, then the bottom end where the tabs are to snap them back in.