kjoiner
Mechanical
- Oct 31, 2002
- 462
Hello,
I saw a previous post regarding the use of silicone rubber keypads and have considered them in the past for products we produce but after having some troubles with remote controls, I have a few question:
Like a lot of people, I have too many remote controls. Of those I have, over time, the keys become non responsive. I have one remote with a volume control that no longer works, and another remote where several buttons no longer work. A while back, I purchased one of the fancy Sony remotes with an LCD touchscreen, but for volume, channel, and menu functions, it has silicone keys and they started giving me trouble. I have taken remotes apart and cleaned them and have noticed a recurring issue. Last night, I became fed up with the non-working keys on the Sony remote and opened it up. Underneath the volume and channel keys, I noticed an oily substance on the silicone, and also on the PCB. Interestingly, the buildup was underneath the most frequently used keys. I got some alcohol and swabs and cleaned both the keys and the traces on the PCB. They now work again. I have another remote with a similar problem and symptom, but cleaning did not fix the volume.
Since remotes are hand held, could the warmth of a hand cause condensation inside the remote? One obvuious culprit of moisture could be spilling someting on the remote but I'm very careful to keep liquids away from the touchscreen remote. Again, the buildup is right around the most frequently used keys.
Also, I have had failure of silicone keypads in cordless telephones.
Could there be a mold release agent leaving the silicone or could there be some silicone leaching out of the keypad?
It's a strange problem. Any ideas?
Thanks,
Kyle
I saw a previous post regarding the use of silicone rubber keypads and have considered them in the past for products we produce but after having some troubles with remote controls, I have a few question:
Like a lot of people, I have too many remote controls. Of those I have, over time, the keys become non responsive. I have one remote with a volume control that no longer works, and another remote where several buttons no longer work. A while back, I purchased one of the fancy Sony remotes with an LCD touchscreen, but for volume, channel, and menu functions, it has silicone keys and they started giving me trouble. I have taken remotes apart and cleaned them and have noticed a recurring issue. Last night, I became fed up with the non-working keys on the Sony remote and opened it up. Underneath the volume and channel keys, I noticed an oily substance on the silicone, and also on the PCB. Interestingly, the buildup was underneath the most frequently used keys. I got some alcohol and swabs and cleaned both the keys and the traces on the PCB. They now work again. I have another remote with a similar problem and symptom, but cleaning did not fix the volume.
Since remotes are hand held, could the warmth of a hand cause condensation inside the remote? One obvuious culprit of moisture could be spilling someting on the remote but I'm very careful to keep liquids away from the touchscreen remote. Again, the buildup is right around the most frequently used keys.
Also, I have had failure of silicone keypads in cordless telephones.
Could there be a mold release agent leaving the silicone or could there be some silicone leaching out of the keypad?
It's a strange problem. Any ideas?
Thanks,
Kyle