Wirelessly Dominate Your Productivity with the Keychron Q1 HE - The Wireless Version You’ve Been Dreaming Of
We can’t seem to go five feet without tripping over a gaming keyboard featuring magnetic Hall Effect switches these days, so it’s no surprise that Keychron has launched its first HE keyboard — the Keychron Q1 HE QMK Wireless Custom keyboard.
We actually first saw this keyboard back in January atCES , and it officially launched at the end of April after a successful Kickstarter run. While it’s not necessarily being marketed as a_gaming_ keyboard, it’s got the magnetic switches and 1,000 Hz polling rate (wired_and_ wireless) that might just land it on our list ofbest gaming keyboards .
The Q1 HE is a 75-percent wireless mechanical keyboard featuring Gateron 2.0 double-rail magnetic Nebula switches — linear magnetic Hall Effect switches with an actuation range of 0.5 - 3.8mm and a bottom-out force of 60g. It comes fully assembled in a solid aluminum chassis with a double gasket mounted hot-swappable PCB, double-shot PBT keycaps, and a programmable knob for $219. You can also buy the barebones version — which comes with the knob but no keycaps or switches — for $20 less ($199). It’s available now in carbon black (black case with white, black, and red keycaps) and shell white (white case with white, teal, and aqua keycaps).
Design and Construction of the Q1 HE
The Q1 HE is a 75-percent gasket mount wireless mechanical keyboard with magnetic switches. At $219 fully-built, this keyboard is pricier than you might expect, especially as Keychron has made a name for itself by producing surprisingly well-priced mechanical keyboards. Keychron also makes theQ1 in a standard, non-magnetic-switch version, which costs $179 fully assembled. The 75 percent layout means that the Q1 HE comes with all alphanumeric keys, a full function row, and a handful of navigation keys — by default, the Q1 HE has PgUp, PgDn, and Home under its customizable rotary knob, but the keyboard comes with other navigation key keycaps that you can swap in if you decide to remap. It comes in both black and white colorways, each with a matching metal knob in the upper-right corner and matching keycaps in complementary colors.
(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
The Q1 HE features the same full metal chassis as its non-HE counterpart: Its body is made entirely of 6063 aluminum and our unit weighed in at exactly 3.75 pounds (1,700g). It’s not the heaviest keyboard we’ve reviewed, but it’s certainly very dense. Its measurements are pretty standard for a 75-percent keyboard: 12.89 x 5.71 x 1.41 inches (327.5 x 145 x 35.8mm), so it will occupy a fairly compact (but hefty) footprint on your desktop. This is similar to theMeletrix Boog75 — another enthusiast-grade gaming keyboard with magnetic switches — which measures 12.74 x 5.74 x 1.37 inches (323.6 x 145.78 x 34.73mm). The Boog75 also has a full metal body made of 6063 aluminum and is heavier at 4.28 pounds (1,941g). (It’s not, however, wireless.)
Like most fully metal mechanical keyboards, the Q1 HE has no built-in height adjustment — it sits at a 5.2-degree angle by default and has four small round rubber feet on the back to prevent slippage from overenthusiastic typing or gaming. The front of the keyboard is about 0.89 inches (22.6mm) high — I didn’t need a wrist rest, but it’s likely some (perhaps most) people will want one. Keychron sells wooden wrist rests sized to fit all of its keyboards on its site; you can pick up theQ1-sized rest for $25 , but it’s currently out of stock.
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(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
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