I've got a Compaq Portable. (I) the big suitcase one, also featured on EEVblog, IIRC. I'm looking into adapting this keyboard for normal PC use and I ran into something strange.
The keyboard uses (AFAIK) the standard AT keyboard protocol of the original IBM PC. With one caveat. Instead of sending 5-volts over the cable it sends... 12-volts over. At first I thought it was doing some sort of RS-232 or something instead of TTL, but no, after buzzing everything out it simply sends 12-volts from the motherboard/PSU, and then slaps on a 7805 immediately after which regulates to 4.88 volts. As long the incoming voltage is >6.8 volts, it regulates at 4.88v steady, all the way up to 15 volts my bench PSU tops out at.
Anyway, the question I have is... does anyone have any idea why someone would 1) go around spec and re-invent the wheel with their own powersupply? The onboard compaq PSU has plenty of 5-volt capacity, and the keyboard consumes maybe 20 milliamps.
Noise issues? Keyboard re-use with other models? (I don't think there's any. This is Compaqs first computer, IIRC.) I mean, if the power rail was too suspect to noise, then certainly the communication lines would also.
I can easily work around it. It's just odd and I can't come up with a plausible design reason for it.
Thanks,
--Chris