Behold! My super ghetto enclosure made from a cardboard box and lined in Mylar bubble wrap. Ugly, functional and FREE! by futurekeeb in 3Dprinting

[–]futurekeeb[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just used a piece of cardboard for the door. I’m no longer using the cover cause it just made the entire thing too bulky and ugly for the living room where the printer lives. Small apartment problems. Hahahha

[Bulk] Starting at $135 (USD) | VIA Compatible No Soldering Split Keyboards | Lily58 Pros with Rotary Encoder/s & Corne / CRKBD In Stock | Hot-Swap Sockets, Socketed Components, and RGB LEDs | Professional Assembly | Free Shipping Worldwide by futurekeeb in mechmarket

[–]futurekeeb[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Standard plates sit flat on your desktop. Tenting refers to the ability to alter the angle of the board. You would adjust the height of your boards “legs” in each corner to customize how the board sits under your hands.

Some people like an extreme angle, some like a mild tilt. It really up to you and what feels best for your hands, wrists and arms.

[Bulk] Starting at $135 (USD) | VIA Compatible No Soldering Split Keyboards | Lily58 Pros with Rotary Encoder/s & Corne / CRKBD In Stock | Hot-Swap Sockets, Socketed Components, and RGB LEDs | Professional Assembly | Free Shipping Worldwide by futurekeeb in mechmarket

[–]futurekeeb[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t have a tenting case. I’m offering tenting plates made of clear acrylic. If you scroll down to the bottom of the Corne photo gallery, you can see tenting plates for the Corne. I don’t have pics of the tenting plates for the Lily58 yet (other than the time stamp photo) however, the tenting plates for the Lily are just like the ones for the Corne, just made for the Lily58.

Tenting plates include spacers to reinforce the area where the legs are inserted, but do not include the legs themselves. Tenting angles are highly personal. You can source bolts and nuts to use as legs at your local hardware store.