Type Like a Pro! ⏩
The Das Keyboard 4 Professional Wired Mechanical Keyboard combines cutting-edge Cherry MX Brown switches with a sleek aluminum design, offering a premium typing experience. With a robust 50 million keystroke lifespan, full N-key rollover, and a convenient 2-port USB 3.0 hub, this keyboard is engineered for productivity and performance, making it the perfect choice for professionals and gamers alike.
Number of USB 2.0 Ports | 2 |
Brand | Das Keyboard |
Series | 4 Professional Cherry MX Brown |
Item model number | DASK4MKPROSIL |
Hardware Platform | PC, Linux, Chrome |
Operating System | Linux |
Item Weight | 2.87 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 18 x 6.8 x 1.3 inches |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 18 x 6.8 x 1.3 inches |
Color | Soft Tactile - Cherry MX Brown Switches |
Power Source | USB powered |
Manufacturer | Das Keyboard |
ASIN | B00JG01QTY |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Date First Available | April 22, 2014 |
L**Z
Wonderful keyboard 1, Terrible keyboard 2. Same model.
Oh my it is hard to get excited by a keyboard but this is clearly, and by a hugh distance, the best keyboard I have ever used. My typing speed doubled overnight. It is a wonderful combination of tactile feedback and soft click auditory feedback on a heavy sturdy based. I got so used to the numb mushy D€|| keyboards at work. I think it is too expensive but find myself bying another for my wife for Christmas so I can get her on her own computer again. I am thinking of also getting one for an employee who does a lot of keyboard work to see if I can make her more productiveThis is an edit:This is my second DAS Keyboard. I loved the first one so much that I hit the reorder button for replacing my keyboard at home. My first keyboard is by far the best keyboard I have ever owned or hope to own. Everyday I sit down to type I marvel at it. My second keyboard which is to have been exactly the same model looks the same but the keyboard I can't recommend this keyboard to anybody. The look, the weight of this keyboard is the same but it is the feel of the keys is completely different and WRONG. The keys are marshmallow responsive, yet stiffer. That tactile wonderful feel is just absent. The keys also feel plastic on the fingertips. The old keyboard keys were smoother to the feel and cold like metal verses dull plastic. That tactile wonderful of my original keyboard that lets me type at 2x my old rate is not muted it is simply gone. I feel like I am typing on a generic OEM keyboard. I am noticeably slower. The keys snap back slower. They even sound slow. What happened? My guess is they switched manufactures of their mechanical keys to save money. This keyboard feels like a $12 generic. Unless you love the look of it steer clear.
D**O
The luxury vehicle of keyboards.
Growing up as a kid in the late 70's and early 80's, keyboards were mostly crisp, clacky, and sturdy. They evoked feelings of working on something special. Computers *were* special back then. Keyboards had well designed actions, built around techniques such as leaf spring mechanical switches, buckling springs, and a number of other innovations. But over the years that followed mass production techniques and tightening profit margins led to the industry-wide adoption of lightweight, plastic-feeling keyboards with keystroke actions built upon rubber domes. Nowadays a typical OEM keyboard might have a production cost of a few dollars, and a spongy, rubbery action to match. We sailed right past midrange scissor switch actions into the low end rubber dome action with barely a thought, arriving at mediocrity.Mid-range keyboards from reputable manufacturers still build upon the rubber dome actions, so even upgrading from OEM or $12 keyboards to the $40 - $50 range significant improvements in the action are not found. So again, we are duped into settling with mediocrity.There is hope out there. Cherry MX switches, Topre switches, and other mechanical style switches are being manufactured for keyboard actions. They're expensive compared to rubber dome keyboards. Each key has a mechanical switch of some sort beneath it, rather than a sheet of heat-molded rubber domes. And the mechanical switches are made with precise characteristics -- softer, firmer, clicky and tactile, non-clicky and tactile, and smooth linear. Each style is designed with a different market segment in mind; linear being the preference of gamers, tactile (clicky or quiet) being the preference for those who's keystrokes produce text, softer for light-press typists, and firmer for mashers.The Cherry MX Brown is a soft, tactile, quiet key, with a subtle bump at the actuation point. With practice muscle-memory is able to get accustomed to that bump, and users become able to type without bottoming out the keys. Typing speed and accuracy often improve, and finger fatigue is reduced compared to typing on keyboards where you have to bottom out each stroke (rubber domes, for example).I debated back and forth between this keyboard and one from WASD, and ultimately went for the Das-4 because of the sturdy aluminum face and USB3 hub. It arrived today and I've had a chance to put it through its paces. While it may take a day or two to get used to the feel, it's going to be a pleasure getting there. Lifting it, the keyboard feels like a tank. Typing on it, the keyboard feels absolutely fantastic. However, I may still add 2mm O-rings to reduce clatter, though I'll wait until I've gotten more accustomed to the tactile feel of Cherry MX Browns. It's possible I'll develop more of a habit of not bottoming out my keystrokes.This sounds too predictable, but when I first plugged it in and began typing on it my first notion was "Wow!"Pros: Heavy and sturdy like you might imagine a keyboard in a 1960's NASA mission control center. A light, tactile, pleasing touch with ample stroke and precise response. The tactile bump of Cherry MX Browns allows me to type without bottoming out the strokes. Already with a little practice my typing is feeling more effortless. USB 3 hub. Nice, sturdy media controls with a well-engineered volume knob. Beautiful design. If there is a better feeling and better engineered keyboard on the market, I sure can't find it. The keycaps are crisply engineered, flawless, and elegant.Cons: Because it is built to last, and made of metal, bottoming out keystrokes makes a bit of clattering that you wouldn't be accustomed to if you have spent years obliviously enduring the misery of rubber-dome keyboards. A set of 2mm O-rings would alleviate that issue, and they are easy enough to order. It's too bad the keyboard manufacturer doesn't make O-rings a special-order option as WASD does. Another con is that the keyboard's elevated support is a little on the low side -- the keyboard sits slightly flatter than I would prefer. But after a few hours I'm already getting used to it. Nearly every mechanical keyboard has a spacebar that seems to stick up a little higher in the air than space bars for dome keyboards. That takes a little time to get used to as well, but after awhile will begin to feel normal.Conclusion: If quality and feel are more important to you than price or RGB lights, this keyboard must be on your short list. The keyboard seems to strive for elegance, feel, and function while eschewing trendy light shows and annoying color schemes.Updated 2/4/17: I've been using the DAS Keyboard 4 Professional with Cherry MX Brown key switches for a few months now. And I even installed first WASD red, and later WASD blue O-rings to further customize the feel. The keyboard feels so nice to use I barely notice it's there. It's a pleasure to type on. ...and then I go home from my office, and when I sit down at the home computer I place my hands over the mid-range "rubber dome" style keyboard, and loathe every moment. The solution? I ordered a second DAS Keyboard 4 Professional and a set of WASD blue o-rings. One at work, one at home. Great keyboards!Updated 9/30/2017: I've been using one of these at my office, and one at home. The one that has had the most use is in my office. I'm a software engineer, and type all day long. The key caps have become a little polished, but the symbols have not faded at all. The key strokes feel as good as the day I got the keyboard. ...maybe even a little better with age. It's my "daily driver". Recently my company provided a second office for me a little closer to home, with the understanding that I would split my time between the offices. For my third mechanical keyboard I ended up going with a Logitch Professional (tenkey-less, with Roamer-G switches). The Roamer-G switches have a slightly shorter keystroke, and the overall feel of that keyboard is more plastic. The Roamer-G switches don't allow for o-ring installation, so it clatters a little more too. But I had to try something new. One thing I can say for the Roamer-G switches is that they feel smoother right out of the box than Cherry-MX Browns. But with age the MX Browns acquire that smooth feeling too. Overall I'm convinced that I like the Das Keyboard better. (A few weeks of use and I have to conclude the MX browns are smoother, and feel more high-end. Sticking with browns in the future.)Update 12/2018: I now have the same keyboard with Cherry MX Blue switches. I put blue O-rings under its key caps to reduce bottoming-out clatter. It took longer to get used to the click blues than the subtle browns, but I also like them very much. If it weren't for the fact that the noise level using blues is higher than when using browns (disturbing to others but gratifying to the typist) I would have to say for typing I prefer the nuanced qualities of both. The blues feel a little more crisp, slightly firmer. Browns a little less tactile, and a little softer touch. Both are excellent. If you don't care about making some noise typing, and want additional crispness, get the blues.If you are a gamer do not get the blues, as their reset point is higher in the stroke than the contact point, making them slower switches for rapid bouncing on a single key. Totally irrelevant for typists.Browns: softer touch, more subtle tactile bump, quieter. Blues: clicker, more crisp feel, slughtly firmer spring. Both, excellent.Update 6/30/2020: I have three of these, now. One at each if my two offices, and one at home. Two of them are MX Brown switches (soft tactile) and one is MX Blue (soft tactile&clicky). I got the blue on accident (thought I was ordering a brown), but kept it and love it too. I've now been typing on these since 2016, and they're still as good as new. The key caps are easy enough to remove for the occasional deep cleaning, but if you avoid spilling drinks on them these keyboards are built to last. They get plenty of use, but aside from the key caps having a more polished look to them you would barely know they're several years old. And the laser etching is still intact. The switches still feel great too.
T**K
Good keyboard with some flaws after years of using
UPDATE ON 08/02/2018:I have been using Das Keyboard for a couple of years now both at my office and home. No matter what other keyboards I have tried for fun, I always came back to my Das Keyboard 4 Professional. It is professional looking simple design is attracting me back to this keyboard.However, I do have some complaints. First of all, you may have to return a couple of them to find the one that has no flaws. Most of the keyboards that were shipped to me have either of these until I found the ones that are perfect:1. Stuck keys: When you press the keys from the sides, they get stuck. It usually happens with the bigger keys such as Caps Lock, Shift, and Enter. I don't press these keys right at the middle all the time. A flaw like this ruins the whole keyboard experience for an expensive product.2. Bad key switches: Some of the key switches make really bad noise when pressed. They are smooth and have problems with the spring in them. You know what I am talking about when you hear them yourself.Another problem, I don't care that much is that keys like A, S, D are becoming shiner and the printed letters started fading away. I personally don't care about this much since I like ABS keycaps. They are softer and dampen the sound of the key presses more than PBT keycaps. I like the smooth surface better than hard grainy surface PBT keycaps offer. But Das Keyboard no longer sells replacement keycaps on their store anymore. They are all sold out for years. Obviously, they more focus on their new Das Keyboard 5Q keyboard.Therefore, I am keeping my 4-star rating. One star is taken due to not enough quality control on the keyboards.ORIGINAL REVIEW:When you started using Das Keyboard, there is not a way go back to your old keyboard. It is expensive. I know. Therefore, I dropped one star from a 5-star keyboard. It works perfectly. Its design is well suited for typing. I do not play games on my computer. Therefore, I cannot judge this keyboard from a gamer's perspective. However, for software engineers, this is a great keyboard and a good asset. We are making money from thinking solutions for problems and typing them to realize the solution. Therefore, the keyboard is a big part of your professional and personal life. A good keyboard changes a lot in your life.Cons1. The keycaps are not high quality.2. Expensive. However, if you are earning money with your keyboard, it may enjoy the quality feeling of this keyboard as well as typing on a mechanical keyboard.3. No backlighting.Pros1. Very well built keyboard expect for the keycaps.2. Nicely designed media keys and knob.3. Good looking and finger-print resistant aluminum surface.4. Great Cherry MX brown switches.5. USB 3.0 ports.If you are a daily typer, this is a sound investment. For gamers, I think you can look for a cheaper alternative with shiny backlighting options.
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