Final Words

The Cherry G80-3494 MX Board Silent is the latest iteration of the legendary Cherry G80-3000 keyboard that was initially released back in the late 1980s. Despite the decades that have passed since then, Cherry has changed virtually nothing except the color of the keyboard. If we do not take the more recently introduced Windows keys or modern USB connectivity into account, the new Cherry MX Black Silent switches are practically the only upgrade that our reviewed model has over the 80s version. Otherwise G80models that are using the classic Cherry MX Blue or other switches are virtually identical to the keyboards that were released years before the first Intel Pentium processor ever hit the store shelves.

Why is Cherry still placing so much faith on such an old design? The answer is simple: proven reliability. For professional applications, that usually is a very important, if not the only selection factor. Especially for applications where reliability is of utmost importance, such as machinery controls and medical equipment, a simple and proven device – and one that long-time users will be incredibly familiar with – outweighs the entirety of the competition with ease.

The inclusion of the new Cherry MX Black Silent switches makes the Cherry G80-3494 MX Board Silent the perfect keyboard for the busy workplace. It is great for professional typists and the noteworthy noise reduction greatly increases the comfort of both the user and everyone else in the immediate vicinity. The low noise output makes it particularly useful for people who work over the phone, minimizing the clicking noise that often disturbs the people on the other side of the line.

The flipside of that however is that because the Cherry G80-3494 is so similar to its classic forefather, it doesn't do anything to break outside of the classic office role it was originally designed for. Consequently, for casual and advanced gamers alike, the Cherry G80 offers little more than a cheap office keyboard. Not that Cherry has claimed any differently, but gamers looking for a retro or no-frills mechanical keyboard may be surprised by just how retro it is.

Otherwise, with a price tag of over $100, pricing is clearly the Achilles’ heel of the Cherry G80-3494 MX Board Silent. $100 places it towards the high-end of the market and well above a number of other mechanical keyboards, and it's a price that cannot be justified by such a simple design. The Cherry G80-3000 design has stood the test of time for a reason – it is a reliable, comfortable mechanical keyboard – but in 2017 it's also clearly one that's aimed at a niche audience. If you fall into that niche, be it because you're after a proven keyboard or are a long time Cherry G80 user that simply wants a quieter version, then the G80-3494 MX Board Silent fits that role nicely. Otherwise, users who are looking to buy a reliable keyboard for everyday use will most likely want to look at another model, as more modern keyboards equipped with the same Cherry switches can be found for less.

Per-Key Quality Testing & Hands-On
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  • blackworx - Wednesday, September 20, 2017 - link

    Also replacement key caps are available for Cherry switches, both individually and as complete sets. I'd be surprised if there was nothing suitable with nubs.
  • Inteli - Wednesday, September 20, 2017 - link

    Since Cherry uses ANSI-standard layouts, the hardest key to get might be the stepped caps lock. Full sets with a normal caps lock key are common and inexpensive, and typically have nubs on the home keys.
  • DanNeely - Wednesday, September 20, 2017 - link

    "I should, however, stress that you should not expect miracles here - the Cherry MX Black Silent switch is much quieter than its regular variant but that alone cannot make any keyboard entirely silent. The Cherry G80-3494 MX Board Silent is much quieter than typical mechanical keyboards but it will still be audible."

    How does it compare with normal Cherry switches with orings installed? I have a keyboard with Red switches and installing o-rings reduced its noise to something tolerable; but still not as quiet as I'd have preferred.
  • Findecanor - Wednesday, September 20, 2017 - link

    The Cherry MX Silent switches silence the upstroke a bit also.
    There are also keyboards from other manufacturers with these Silent Red or Silent Black and with a more solidly built case.
  • Robotire - Wednesday, September 20, 2017 - link

    I’d love to try a "silent" mechanical keyboard, but this is just yet another non-ergonomic keyboard with keys that are not placed accordingly to the fingers’ position. I don’t understand why keyboard makers keep releasing a couple new models a week of the same old broken keyboard layout…
  • ayabe - Wednesday, September 20, 2017 - link

    Because those types of keyboards are and will always be niche products. They've been out in various flavors for 20 years, everyone who wanted to try one already has yet sales are...terrible.

    It's about the money.
  • dave_the_nerd - Wednesday, September 20, 2017 - link

    Yup. Money makes the world go 'round.

    Same reason you can barely find a good ergonomic trackball.
  • Diji1 - Wednesday, September 20, 2017 - link

    I realise they're following a classic design but damn, so much bezel if that's the correct word (it probably isn't).
  • Inteli - Wednesday, September 20, 2017 - link

    I mean, if you REALLY want to try a silent switch, you could build an Ergodox, or buy an MX ergonomic keyboard, disassemble every switch and swap out the internals for the silent switch internals.
  • bigboxes - Thursday, September 21, 2017 - link

    Ergonomic keyboards suck. I suppose it varies on the individual. I like to be productive so I prefer a standard keyboard. Now, everything else is ergonomic. The keyboard tray, the chair (and it's arms), the monitor (on a arm).

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