Keyboard Teardown and Alkaline Battery Leakages

Had an external Logitech Keyboard stored away in a box. Alas, I left the batteries on them! It leaked to spring contacts and then the circuit. It has corroded a whole most of the Carbon and Copper pads on the circuit. It’s beyond repair and it’s officially dead.

Coming to the teardown, the internals of most keyboards (Non-mechanical switch type) will contain multi-layer plastic sheets with printed silver contacts acting as switches. When you press down, the 2 layers come in contact and a press is registered. It’s usually wired in a row/column approach and it’s polled many times a second to register a press. These sheets are press fitted on Carbon contacts on the main PCB. Carbon contacts are a cheap and reliable way to avoid physical connectors. In the image, you will see them as black fingers on the edge of the PCB. These are driven by Nordic’s old nRF31504 2.4GHz Wireless IC. It has a PCB antenna which communicates to your PC via a 2.4GHz dongle. Few PCB traces are all corroded by the battery leakage. The metal can is a 16MHz external crystal to maintain timing for the chip. It’s a shame that I couldn’t get this working.

Let’s talk batteries now. Why do Alkaline batteries leak? Usually, when left on a product for a long time, the battery discharges and a chemical reaction causes the generation of hydrogen gas, which can break the seal even in good brand batteries. Once the seal is broken, the alkaline electrolyte Potassium hydroxide leaks onto the contacts and it reacts with Carbon dioxide in the air to form your white powder (Potassium Carbonate) which you find on the metal spring contacts. KOH is highly corrosive and it eats away your copper traces. So never keep batteries in your product if you are not going to use them.

Pro Tip: If you have a problem like this and the leakage hasn’t affected the circuit, you can use any mild acid like vinegar to clean those metal contacts and neutralise the white powder and get your device working.

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Measuring Tape Teardown

Had taken out a cheap measuring tape from my tool kit for some measurements earlier this week. These are the ones which spring back when you release them. Turns out my darn tape won’t coil back. It was stuck with the entire section hanging out. Then I thought why not, let’s open it up and see what’s happening.

Measuring Tape Teardown
Measuring Tape Teardown
Measuring Tape Teardown
Measuring Tape Teardown

Measuring tape consists of a metallic yellow/white unit with black markings(Usually high contrast colours are used for easy reading). It’s coiled all along a central hub. The magic happens in the central hub which consists of a tightly coiled spring(Guessing it’s made of some form of spring steel) which rotates in the other direction (Creating more tension) when the tape is pulled out. The length of the coil of the spring is almost the same as the measurement tape itself. When released, the spring coils back pulling the entire tape back in a snap. An elegant design which looks simple enough. Seems that in my unit, the spring steel part is broken. It’s not really worth repairing these by cutting the spring steel and reattaching, as a new one will cost you only around INR 100($1.2), but sure you can repair it if you want to, be ready to deal with unwinding a mangled tape though.

Measuring Tape Patent

When I searched the patent databases, I found the potentially first design of this tape which was filed more than 150+ years ago in 1864. Patent No. US45372A. Nice to see that a design engineered that far back is still relevant and fully functional today.

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