The Corsair K95 RGB Platinum Mechanical Gaming Keyboard

The new Corsair K95 RGB Platinum is clearly based on the same aesthetic design as the rest of the K×× keyboards series, but is not physically identical to any of the previous K95 or K70 versions. It appears to be more of a hybrid between the two, designed to please the users who were complaining about the lack of macro keys on any K70 keyboard and found the K95 keyboards to be excessively large.

The Corsair K95 RGB Platinum features an anodized brushed aluminum chassis, with the keys secured directly on its surface rather than being embedded into it. Its “floating” design makes it very simple to clean, as a simple blow would remove most debris from the aluminum surface of the keyboard. The Corsair logo at the top of the keyboard is now part of a glossy plastic frame that is backlit.

The Corsair K95 RGB Platinum is a standard 104-key keyboard expanded with a six extra keys to the left. It does not fully adhere to the ANSI layout, as the bottom row of the keyboard has a 6.5× Spacebar, two 1.25× ALT, two 1.5× CTRL and three 1× WIN/Menu bottom row keys. The standard ANSI layout has a 6.25× Spacebar and seven 1.25× bottom row keys. This is the “gaming” layout that reduces the size of the unnecessary WIN/Menu keys in favor of the more useful CTRL/Spacebar keys. Corsair has been using this layout on all of their advanced keyboards. The keycaps are made from ABS plastic and have large, futuristic characters, while the Space Bar key is textured.

The extra six keys to the left of the main keyboard are grey, textured and contoured, much like the extra ten keycaps that Corsair supplies for gaming. As we will see in the following pages, these and any other keys of the Corsair K95 RGB Platinum can be programmed to execute virtually everything from simple keystrokes to advanced macros.

Four plastic media control buttons can be seen above the keypad, right below the silver volume control wheel. A short, wide button next to the volume control wheel is by default the volume mute button. Three similar buttons can be seen towards the left side of the keyboard as well. The first one can be used to rotate between programmed profiles, the second adjusts the backlight brightness and the third is the “gaming mode” that by default locks the WIN keys.

  

 

Beneath the keycaps we found the Cherry MX RGB Speed switches. The default MX Speed switch is a modified version of the classic MX Red switch, with its travel distance reduced by 0.8 mm. This offers faster actuation (1.2 mm to the actuation point instead of 2 mm) but also shortens the full travel distance of the key as well. However, things are not technically quite as simple as that. The actuation force remains the same (45 gram-force) while the distance is shortened by nearly 50%. While the travel of the key remains linear, the force per mm of travel increases at a much higher rate. As a result, the MX Speed switch feels significantly stiffer and stronger to the user, especially after the actuation point, and also resets faster than the classic MX Red switch. There is a version of the K95 RGB Platinum coming out with tactile Cherry MX RGB Brown switches as well.

The bottom of the K95 RGB Platinum is entirely unlike any other that we have seen from Corsair to this date. There are four very large anti-skid pads, firmly securing the keyboard into place on any surface. As a matter of fact, the grip of the pads is so strong that the tilt feet are being forced to retract if one tries to push the keyboard sideways while it is sitting on a desk. Two cable channels can be seen forming a large X. The designer’s idea must have been gaming headsets, as this design allows the headset cable to be cleanly routed underneath the keyboard.

A single USB 3.0 port can be found at the rear of the K95 RGB Platinum. Do note that both of the keyboard’s USB connectors need to be inserted for the pass-through port to function, even if the main connector is plugged into a USB 3.0 port. The second connector is not necessary for the keyboard itself to function properly if the main connector has been plugged into a USB 3.0 port, only the USB pass-through port will not function. If the main connector is plugged into a USB 2.0 port, the use of both connectors becomes a necessity, as the keyboard’s power requirements technically exceed the capacity of a USB 2.0 port.

On the inside, the K95 RGB Platinum is similar to the K70 RGB, but is using an upgraded and significantly more complex layout. The heart of the keyboard is a NXP LPC11U68JBD100 microprocessor, an ARM Cortex-M0+ based chipset with a CPU frequency of 50 MHz, 256 kB Flash memory, 4 kB EEPROM and 36 kB SRAM. Corsair most likely selected this particular chip not because of its processing power but because of its impressive internal flash memory. An extra SPANSION FL164K 8MB memory chip can be found nearby, which is being used to store the onboard programmed profiles. 

  

Introduction, Packaging & Bundle The (New) Corsair Utility Engine Software
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  • nathanddrews - Tuesday, March 7, 2017 - link

    Is the glow around the keys mostly from a longer exposure time or is there really that much glow to it?
  • Sparkyman215 - Tuesday, March 7, 2017 - link

    I have the old model, that's how it looks at full brightness. It's because the keycaps float above the frame and the led's are basically under it. There's a lot of light bleed
  • Manch - Tuesday, March 7, 2017 - link

    I hope there isn't that much glow. It only needs to be a keyboard. If it does it would unintentionally expand its capabilities....you could twirl a couple of them at a EDM festival, guide aircraft landing on a carrier, direct traffic, recreate a triple rainbow.....
  • theblacklaser - Tuesday, March 7, 2017 - link

    @Manch the lighting is fully configurable in software. You can set the brightness and color to whatever you want.
  • Manch - Tuesday, March 7, 2017 - link

    I know. I don't remember what model I have. Its red LED only. Love the build quality. I'm just having a bit of fun about the garish lights.
  • goatfajitas - Tuesday, March 7, 2017 - link

    There is alot of light bleed coming from under the keys. That is always the major drawback for Corsair (and many other) mechanical KB's. I stick with Logitech for that reason. They at least embed them a good deal better so its not so hideous.
  • Agent Smith - Tuesday, March 7, 2017 - link

    Far too much light bleed on this very expensive keyboard, which just detracts and becomes gimmicky. The Logitech G910 and PRO has a far better implementation with just etched keys lighting up as per game profiles. Much neater and more professional looking IMO
  • Manch - Tuesday, March 7, 2017 - link

    The 910 is less gimmicky? LOL Looks like a space battle axe. Tape it to a broom and you could go LARPing with it. I agree the lights are too much on this KB though
  • philehidiot - Tuesday, March 7, 2017 - link

    Ha!
  • Xinn3r - Tuesday, March 7, 2017 - link

    I think he meant the G810 and PRO, as the PRO is essentially a TKL G810. Was just announced too, looks good.

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