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When building or upgrading a mechanical keyboard, stabilizers play a huge role in how your keyboard feels and sounds, especially on larger keys like the spacebar, enter, backspace, and shift. Two of the most common types you’ll encounter are PCB stabilizers and plate stabilizers.

So what’s the difference—and which one should you choose? Let’s break it down.

What Are Stabilizers?

Stabilizers are components that prevent larger keys from wobbling when pressed off-center. Without stabilizers, wide keys would feel uneven, rattly, and inconsistent.

PCB Stabilizers (PCB-Mount Stabilizers)

How They Mount

PCB stabilizers attach directly to the PCB (printed circuit board). They typically come in two types:

  • Screw-in
  • Clip-in

Pros

  • Superior stability and consistency
  • Less rattle when properly tuned
  • Preferred many custom keyboard builders
  • Perform well with flexible plates and gasket mounts

Cons

  • Slightly more effort to install
  • Requires a PCB that supports PCB-mounted stabilizers
Plate Stabilizers (Plate-Mount Stabilizers)

How They Mount

Plate stabilizers clip directly into the keyboard plate, which provides their main support.

Pros

  • Easier and faster to install
  • Commonly used in prebuilt keyboards
  • Compatible with PCBs that support plate mount stabilizers

Cons

  • Less stable than PCB stabilizers
  • More prone to rattle and ticking
  • Harder to fine-tune
PCB Stabs vs Plate Stabs: Quick Comparison

Feature PCB Stabilizers Plate Stabilizers
Mounting PCB Plate
Stability High Medium
Rattle Lower Medium
Installation Moderate Easy

Final Thoughts

Stabilizers may seem like a small detail, but they make a huge difference in how your keyboard sounds and feels. If you’re chasing that smooth, rattle-free typing experience, PCB stabilizers are usually the way to go. That said, plate stabilizers still get the job done—especially for simpler or prebuilt setups.

Happy building! ⌨️✨