For Sale SteelSeries 7G Gaming Keyboard

SteelSeries 7G Gaming KeyboardBuy SteelSeries 7G Gaming Keyboard

SteelSeries 7G Gaming Keyboard Product Description:



  • Supports all keys pressed down at once
  • Durable metal inner chassis
  • Features SteelSeries Media Control
  • Removable hand rest

Product Description

SteelSeries 7G sets new industry standards for gaming keyboards by allowing users to perform the most detailed and advanced key combinations to date. By utilizing the most powerful PS/2 buffer-system ever created for a gaming keyboard, SteelSeries 7G redefines "anti-ghosting" by supporting as many simultaneous key presses as there are keys on the keyboard. The keyboard features both PS/2 and USB connectors. The use of PS/2 combined with a gold-plated USB connector and 18K gold-plated mechanical switches, means that SteelSeries 7G improves your ability to obtain more Actions Per Minute than any other keyboard in the world. It features gaming grade response times and more than six times the durability of a traditional keyboard.

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

17 of 17 people found the following review helpful.
5Well Built Keyboard!
By P. McGuire
I'm a keyboard nut. I've purchased and used every keyboard that Microsoft sells as well as several major Logitech keyboards. Mavis Beacon and various websites rate me at 180wpm+. I spend 9 hours a day at work on a keyboard and the rest of my free time at home on a keyboard (gaming, WoW, Eve-Online, etc...).When I got this shipped from Amazon - several keys had "popped" off during shipping (a rough shipping no doubt). They slid back on without a problem and they don't fall off even if I try to shake them off. Just not something I'd expect from a $120 keyboard (keys falling off during shipping). Might be a positive note for those of you that like to re-arrange your keyboard to a DEVORAK layout like my co-worker.When I first plugged this keyboard in, my computer was off. When I booted up the keyboard was not recognized. Solution? Boot up into Windows, log in *then* plug in the keyboard. After that, the keyboard is recognized during bootup. This is due to the fact that I'm using the PS2 to USB converter.First off, after unpacking, this keyboard is extremely heavy. I like this because cheap plastic keyboards slide all over as I type on them. The keyboard does not have any feet in back but the design build of the keyboard has a slight raise in the back - which I find very comfortable. The keypress is not "long" like all the other online reviews I've read. Maybe it is if you are using a laptop. The normal Dell keyboards have a longer keypress in my opinion. When you begin to type on this keyboard you'll note how amazingly easy it is to type. There is absolutely no resistance to keypress even if you hit a key from the side like some keyboards I've used. The key rebound is solid and provides great "tactile feedback." Also, the sound of the keys is a little different. Yes, the keypress noise is loud. Another note - keypress is registered about half way through allowing for some seriously fast typing when you want to go full speed. Overall, it has been a very positive experience typing on this keyboard. I'm trying to find any excuse to type because I like the keyboard so much.The LCD lights for Num, Caps, and Scroll are incredibly bright white LED lights that will blind you if you look at them too long. However, that is only the case if you look at them directly above them - from where you are typing - the light is perfectly fine. I really enjoy the bright white light because I can detect if I have a key on out of the corner of my eye instead of looking down and wondering if I have the num lock key on or not.-----------------------------------------------------------------Overall, this keyboard rocks. I definitely recommend it to friends who want to enjoy a good quality keyboard.Pros:1. Solid build - you'd have to try hard to break this.2. Ease of keypress allowing for some really fast wpm speeds.3. 50 million rated keypress - this thing won't be dying anytime soon.4. USB ports and headphone jacks right at your finger tips - no more ducking under your desk and fiddling with wires to connect your headset anymore. (I have a USB Creative headset).Cons:1. The "Windows" key is on the right side only. The Left side key is actually a SteelKeys function key that allows you to do music controls. This may bother some but I found it easy to adapt.2. When shipped 1 day air - keys were popped off the keyboard - not something you expect from a $120 keyboard - however, placing them back on the keyboard = everything was ok.

34 of 39 people found the following review helpful.
5best keyboard money can buy
By Schnappi
For three years I'm looking for the perfect keyboard. Finally I found it. It was a long way beginning with the IBM PS/2 Keyboard, Cherry G80, Logitech G15 and Razer Tarantula. To make a long story short:IBM and Cherry weren't gaming keyboards. Both are only Alpha N-key rollover. That means you cannot press the 'W' + 'D' and the 'E' key at once. In the gaming scene it's called "Ghost Key Effect". Edit a file and press and hold the 'W' key, then add the 'D' until 'd' is repeated. If you then add the 'E' key, the repetition stops. The keyboard is not able to solve this problem as these keys - among others - are on the same cluster (on some Keyboards there are other combinations like W+S+D).The Logitech was even worse! It's only called a gaming keyboard but it's only alpha N-Key rollover, needs driver to work properly and finally it has membrane Switches.The Razer Tarantula was the first real gaming keyboard allowing full N-Key rollover. For the first time I got rid of the ghost key effect. Here you can press any key combination. But: you cannot press 10 Keys at the same time like Razer said! As it is an USB keyboard and the USB limit is 6 Keys. Ergo: only 6 Keys at the same time. But it was a huge leap from a G15 to the Tarantula. The biggest problem was that the Tarantula needed also drivers to work properly.Finally the optimum keyboard: Steelseries 7G!Put all you need together you get the 7G!!The best key switches (Cherry linear MX-series switch) and a real FULL N-Key rollover! Press ALL keys at the same time ... surprise: it's there!!! NO DRIVER!! Great!!! Just plug in - and it works. No updates, no bug fixes, no incompatibility problems - just: rock solid! And it saves memory and CPU time.The arm rest is perfectly build and the keyboard of state of the art quality.No bling, no extras just: pure performance!About the price:I spent more money on the Tarantula and I regret it. This keyboard is worth its money.

23 of 26 people found the following review helpful.
5Great gaming keyboard!
By Joann
My husband and I are avid gamers and like to collect the best available equipment. The keyboards with the screens, fancy lights, and macro keys look good but a lot of people don't know or don't care that these keyboards use up some of your system memory because of the programs they run. As games become more and more memory intensive, I don't want my system memory wasted on a keyboard. Most games will allow you to make macros using the existing keys so you don't need those extra macro keys at all.This keyboard is great! I love the way the keys feel. They are really easy on your fingers and that is wonderful if you play as many hours as we do.The BEST thing about this keyboard is that you can use many keys at the same time. For example...I hit two buff keys, two or three potion keys, and my weapon style...all at the same time! Then when the fight commences, you can hit your spells at the same time you hit your weapon styles. You may say, "you can do that with a macro and only hit one key". Yes, you can but you can't make changes on the fly due to the attacks of the NPC's like you can with this keyboard. It is difficult to explain but I hope you get the idea.The keyboard is very classy looking and you can tell it is very well made and will last a long time.I hope this helps.

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Low Cost MC Enterprises Deluxe Hi-Way Bars Holy Pegs 279

MC Enterprises Deluxe Hi-Way Bars Holy Pegs 279Buy MC Enterprises Deluxe Hi-Way Bars Holy Pegs 279

MC Enterprises Deluxe Hi-Way Bars Holy Pegs 279 Product Description:



  • Triple-chromed 5/8in. square bar

Product Description

Triple-chromed 5/8" square barThis item fits the following models: 2002-2003 Kawasaki VN1500P Vulcan 1500 Mean Streak2004-2006 Kawasaki VN1600B Vulcan 1600 Mean Streak2005 Suzuki M95 Boulevard2004 Suzuki VZ1600 Marauder

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0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
5exaclty what I expected
By Jake
fits well on my 03 Meanstreak, careful when removing the bolts that hold the engine to the frame! get a jack to take the pressure off the bolts.

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Deals for Iomega eGo Rugged Portable Hard Drive, USB 2.0, 160GB, Midnight Blue - 33981

Iomega eGo Rugged Portable Hard Drive, USB 2.0, 160GB, Midnight Blue - 33981Buy Iomega eGo Rugged Portable Hard Drive, USB 2.0, 160GB, Midnight Blue - 33981

Iomega eGo Rugged Portable Hard Drive, USB 2.0, 160GB, Midnight Blue - 33981 Product Description:



  • Device Type - Portable
  • Dimensions WxDxH - 3.5" x 0.75" x 5.25"
  • Weight - 0.48 lbs
  • Interfaces/Ports -- USB 2.0 USB

Product Description

Take files anywhere, in style, with the Iomega eGo Rugged Midnight Blue Portable Hard Drive, USB 2.0 - an extremely durable drive which includes patent pending Drop Guard feature to withstand the toughest of travel environments. Available in 160GB capacity, it holds up to 640,000 photos, over 2,900 hours of music and 240 hours of video. Plus, the Iomega eGo Portable Hard Drive requires no external power supply and includes a free EMC Retrospect HD backup software license.

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245 of 246 people found the following review helpful.
5Iomega Seems to be Best of Breed with USB Hard Drives
By S. Gerber
This is my third Iomega. First was a "Silver Portable" 40GB drive. Ran perfectly for over a year and I gave it to my son so he could finally back up his WinXP system. Then I bought a 120GB USB/Firewire "Silver Portable" and it ran perfectly for over a year and was just retired to my backup computer so I could buy a larger one, my first Iomega that's not a "Silver Portable".If you've read complaints throughout Amazon about the Western Digital and Maxtor and others regarding some very important flaws like running noisy, breaking in a few months, and not getting enough power from the USB port, then do consider this one. This drive runs very quietly and only draws around 100mA from a standard 500mA USB port.You've probably read that it's important with Windows XP to format your USB hard drive using the NTFS file system and then set it in device manager's "Policies" tab to "optimize for performance". That's quite true and worth mentioning. You'll get best speed this way and really don't lose anything except compatibility with Windows 95, 98 and ME. What are they, you ask? ;>) Also, the drive comes with an 8MB cache which helps give it such fine performance.Comparing this drive to my other Iomega Silver Portables, it's supposed to be more shock resistant but I don't plan to ever test that. On the negative side it is larger and cannot be placed in a shirt pocket like the others. It's just a bit longer, wider and heavier - no problem at all though for a brief case, a laptop's accessory compartment, or even a small woman's purse. It runs a bit warmer also. Not hot at all but I'm just spoiled by the other Iomegas which run cooler. It does not have rubber feet but is not especially slippery either. I'm more comfortable with things like this by placing them atop a piece of Rubbermaid non-skid rubberized shelfing material, cut to fit, but that may be overkill.From the other reviews I've read including Western Digital, Seagate, Maxtor, LaCie and some others, there didn't seem to be another manufacturer that I would have faith in. Not to demean this drive at all, but if I were to buy it again or buy another for myself, I would definitely consider another "Silver Portable" for its compactness, lower temperature, and ridiculously low power draw from the USB port. At this writing, they are still available on Amazon but will be selling out in the near future. They are:1. Model 33634 - USB/Firewire 120GB for $100 (I have this one already)2. Model 33600 - USB 160GB for $80.Finally, software. The drive comes with a license for some Iomega licensed backup software. Backup software is very difficult to trust, and usually you don't learn how competent it is until your hard drive fails or some virus eats you alive. Crunch time is a bit late to be disappointed by your backup software. I very strongly encourage you to take a hard look at Acronis True Image software. I have it as do some friends and it doesn't disappoint. Even works on a PC with RAID1 hard drives, if that means anything to you. Probably the only program for PCs that does. It even comes with a bootable CD version which runs slower doing the backup than the installed version, but can be very convenient.I've run dry and this review has run long. Thanks for reading. Hope I've been helpfulRegards ... Sam

289 of 308 people found the following review helpful.
5A real jewel of an external drive - but only in looks!
By Yurij Trytjak
(Last paragraph added Jan. 14, 2008.)I took a close look at about 10-12 external drives on the Internet, comparing capacities, dimensions and weights and looks. Yes, looks were important to me because I intended the drive for travel purposes. After a business associate had his notebook stolen in the Hong Kong airport I decided that my notebook would never again contain my entire 'business office' again. I wanted a drive that I could put in my shirt, coat or pants pocket whenever leaving my hotel room, and leave only my notebook with the O/S and applications on it. You can move your Outlook.pst file, your Favorites from IE, anything you want, onto the external drive by right-click/drag/move these (and other) O/S folders to another location of your choosing. In terms of data files I decided to keep only my iTunes system on Drive C: and I put all other data files on the external drive. When traveling I keep the drive on my person at all times. If the notebook goes in the overhead compartment the portable drive stays in my pocket. Before leaving home for any kind of trip I first copy everything from the portable external drive onto a desktop external so that I lose nothing much if my traveling drive meets with disaster. I also copy the entire iTunes system from drive C: to the desktop external.So, I really needed and wanted a small, light and good looking external drive that would not need external power, thereby available for use at any time. The 160GB Ego USB 2.0 by iomega fits the bill in spades. It's very light, looks like a million, no boxy sharp corners like all the rest, and is advertised as having special shock protection in case of being dropped. I'm not planning to do any end-user testing to prove this point. My wholehearted recommendation for this drive.One more reminder for backups: you can leave the desktop backup at home when you travel, but when you return take the backup out of the house. Take the backup either to the office, or your detached garage, or some other off-premises location. A backup sitting next to your original data is protection only against hard disk failure. Other calamaties like a fire, or theft, requires that the two be separated a good distance. Hey, stuff happens.Now the follow-up. I will keep it short. The first Iomega 160 Gig. drive failed after a month, went back for factory repair and it failed again shortly thereafter. Iomega replaced it and the second drive failed a few weeks later. I gave up on it, bought a Stor-It 320 Gig. (also red and pocketable, from pexagontech.com), and it has been performing flawlessly for over a year.

75 of 76 people found the following review helpful.
5Just What I Was Looking For
By Robert Christiansen
I was looking for a portable hard drive to replace the 5GB model I bought a couple years ago. I need to transfer large stereo audio files between my work and home studios and the earlier one was no longer cutting it. This Iomega drive is perfect, and only about $10 more than I paid for the 5GB (which was a bargain at the time)!The only small drawback is that it requires two USB connections to make sure that it has adequate power. The hard drives I've been connecting to so far have had two open slots available, but just to make sure I went out and bought a small 4-1 USB Hub so I wouldn't be caught flat-footed. My co-workers all really like the drive, and a couple intend to get their own, but their first reaction is that it's a whiskey flask!

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