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Guide

Custom PBT Keycaps Manufacturer: Doubleshot vs Dye-Sub vs OEM — What Keyboard Brands Need to Know

If you’re searching for a custom PBT keycaps manufacturer, a double shot PBT keycaps supplier, a dye sublimation PBT keycaps manufacturer, or an OEM keycaps manufacturer for keyboard brands — you’re asking four different questions that lead to the same factory floor. The difference is in the manufacturing method, not the manufacturer.

This guide breaks down each PBT keycap production method from a buyer’s perspective: what the process actually looks like, what it costs at different MOQ levels, what can go wrong, and how to spec your order so the factory gets it right the first time.

PBT keycaps: why the material choice matters before the manufacturing method

PBT (polybutylene terephthalate) is the standard for premium custom keycaps. Compared to ABS:

Property PBT ABS
Shine resistance Excellent — textured surface holds for years Develops glossy shine within 6–12 months of heavy use
Sound profile Deeper, thockier Higher-pitched, clackier
Shrinkage during molding Higher (1.5–2.0%) — needs compensation in mold design Lower (0.4–0.7%) — easier to mold consistently
Dye absorption Excellent — dye-sub legends are sharp and permanent Poor — dye-sub doesn’t work well on ABS
UV resistance Good — minimal yellowing over time Poor — yellows with extended UV exposure
Cost per kg (raw material) $3.50–$5.00 $2.00–$3.00

Bottom line for buyers: If your brand positions as premium or enthusiast-grade, spec PBT. The higher raw material cost is offset by the fact that you won’t deal with customer complaints about shiny keycaps 8 months in.

Method 1: Dye-sublimation PBT keycaps

How it works

Dye-sublimation uses heat and pressure to force dye into the surface of the PBT keycap. The dye penetrates ~0.2mm into the plastic — it’s not a coating that rubs off. The legend becomes part of the keycap itself.

The process: a reverse-printed transfer sheet is aligned onto blank PBT keycaps → heated press at ~200°C under pressure → dye vaporizes and bonds with the PBT polymer → transfer sheet is removed → legend is permanently embedded.

What dye-sub does well

  • No per-legend mold cost. The biggest cost advantage. One transfer sheet setup ($30–$60) covers the entire keyset. Compare to doubleshot where every unique legend needs its own mold insert.
  • Unlimited colors on a single keycap. Want a 5-color gradient legend? Dye-sub handles it. Doubleshot caps out at 2–3 colors per key due to mold complexity.
  • Novelty designs are cheap to iterate. Change a design? New transfer sheet, not a new mold. Ideal for limited drops and group buys.
  • Sharp at small font sizes. Sub-legend characters (like Hangul, Katakana, or Russian sub-legends) stay crisp at 4pt.

What dye-sub doesn’t do well

  • Light legends on dark keycaps only. Dye-sub adds color — it can’t remove it. You can dye a dark legend onto a light keycap, but not a white legend onto a black keycap. For light-on-dark, you need doubleshot.
  • Slight legend blur on very thick PBT (1.5mm+). Thicker keycaps diffuse heat during pressing, which can soften legend edges. A good factory compensates with dwell time and pressure calibration.

Cost breakdown: dye-sub PBT keycaps

MOQ Setup fee (design + color match) Per-set cost (104-key, ANSI) Total for batch
500 sets $120 $8.50 $4,370
1,000 sets $120 $6.80 $6,920
2,000 sets Waived $5.20 $10,400
5,000 sets Waived $3.90 $19,500

Prices are FOB Shenzhen. Sea freight to US West Coast adds ~$0.30–$0.50/set at pallet quantity. Custom packaging adds $0.50–$1.50/set depending on complexity.

Method 2: Doubleshot PBT keycaps

How it works

Doubleshot injection molding shoots two separate shots of plastic into the same mold: first shot forms the legend (the inner plastic), second shot forms the keycap body (the outer plastic) around it. The legend runs through the entire thickness of the keycap — it’s physically impossible to wear off.

A double shot PBT keycaps supplier needs precision mold-making capability. Each unique legend shape requires a machined mold insert. A full 104-key ANSI set with doubleshot legends means ~104 separate legend inserts, plus the keycap body molds for each row profile.

What doubleshot does well

  • Legends never wear off. Not “resistant.” Not “durable.” The legend IS the keycap. You can sand it down 2mm and the legend is still there. This is the gold standard.
  • Light legends on dark keycaps. White-on-black, cyan-on-navy, yellow-on-dark-gray — any contrast combination works. This is the main reason to choose doubleshot over dye-sub.
  • Consistent legend placement. Mold alignment tolerances are tighter than manual transfer-sheet alignment. Batch-to-batch legend position variation is under 0.15mm.
  • Shine-through legends. Use translucent plastic for the legend shot + opaque for the body → backlit keycaps that won’t fade.

What doubleshot doesn’t do well

  • Small batches are expensive. That upfront mold cost is real. Below 1,000 sets, dye-sub is almost always the better financial choice.
  • Limited colors per keycap. Each color requires a separate shot. Two-shot molds are standard; three-shot exists but significantly increases mold cost and cycle time.
  • Longer lead time for new designs. Mold fabrication adds 15–20 days to the timeline on a first order.

Cost breakdown: doubleshot PBT keycaps

MOQ Mold fee (full 104-key set) Per-set cost Total for batch
1,000 sets $8,000–$12,000 $12.00 $20,000–$24,000
2,000 sets $8,000–$12,000 $9.50 $27,000–$31,000
5,000 sets $8,000–$12,000 $7.20 $44,000–$48,000
10,000 sets Waived (amortized) $5.80 $58,000

Mold fee range depends on legend complexity: simple Latin alphanumeric is at the low end; custom icons, multi-line legends, or sub-legends push toward the high end. Molds are yours — you own them and can take them to another factory.

Method 3: Laser-etched and UV-printed PBT

Two lower-cost methods worth mentioning, especially for prototypes and small runs:

  • Laser etching: Laser burns away the top layer of dye-coated PBT to reveal a lighter legend. Best for single-color legends with simple fonts. Legends can wear over time (not permanent like dye-sub or doubleshot). MOQ as low as 100 sets.
  • UV printing: UV-cured ink printed onto the keycap surface, then sealed with a clear coat. Allows full-color, photo-quality legends. Durability depends on the clear coat quality — good UV print can last 3–5 years of daily use. MOQ as low as 100 sets.

OEM keycaps for keyboard brands: how the relationship works

Searching for an OEM keycaps manufacturer for keyboard brands usually means you want one of three arrangements:

Arrangement What it means Best for
Pure OEM We manufacture your keycap design to your spec. Your brand, your IP, your molds. You sell as your own product. Established brands with their own keycap designs and colorways
ODM (design collaboration) We propose designs and colorways based on market trends. You pick, refine, and brand. Faster time-to-market than pure OEM. New brands building their first product line
White-label / stock with branding We have existing keycap designs in production. You add your brand packaging and sell. Lowest MOQ, fastest turnaround. Retailers, distributors, brands testing the market

As an OEM keycaps manufacturer for keyboard brands, we’re comfortable with all three. The right model depends on your budget, timeline, and how differentiated your product needs to be.

Method comparison: which one for your brand?

Factor Dye-Sub PBT Doubleshot PBT Laser / UV PBT
Legend durability 20+ years Permanent (life of keycap) 3–8 years
Best MOQ range 500–5,000 1,000–10,000+ 100–1,000
Setup cost $120 $8,000–$12,000 $30–$80
Light-on-dark legends ✅ (UV only)
Multi-color legends ✅ Unlimited ⚠️ 2–3 colors ✅ Full color (UV only)
Lead time (first order) 25–35 days 35–50 days 15–25 days
Per-set at 500 units $8.50 N/A (min 1,000) $5.00–$7.00
Per-set at 2,000 units $5.20 $9.50 + mold $3.50–$5.00

Quality red flags: what to inspect in a pre-production sample

Before signing off on a full production run, check your pre-production samples for these common PBT keycap defects:

  1. Legend misalignment. Hold the keycap next to a reference. Legend should be centered within ±0.2mm. Off-center legends are the #1 reason for batch rejection.
  2. Stem fit. Mount the keycap on a Cherry MX-style switch. It should seat firmly without wobble. Too loose = keycaps fly off during typing. Too tight = you’ll crack stems pulling them off.
  3. Burrs / flash on the bottom edge. Run your finger along the bottom edge. Should be smooth. Flash means worn molds or rushed cycle times.
  4. Color consistency across the set. Compare the alphas to the modifiers under the same lighting. PBT color drift between mold cavities is a real problem — tolerance should be Delta E < 1.5.
  5. Warping on spacebars. PBT shrinks more than ABS during cooling. Spacebars over 6.25u are especially prone to warping. Lay it on a flat surface — gap should be under 0.3mm at the ends.
  6. Dye-sub bleeding (if applicable). Check legend edges under magnification. Clean, sharp boundary = good. Fuzzy edges with dye bleeding into the keycap surface = press temperature or dwell time is off.

Why work with AllwinKey for PBT keycaps

  • All three PBT methods under one roof. Dye-sub, doubleshot, and laser/UV. No subcontracting. We run all three production lines in-house, so quality responsibility doesn’t get passed between factories.
  • 15+ years of injection molding. PBT’s shrinkage behavior isn’t something you learn from a manual — it’s learned over thousands of mold cycles. Our mold compensation profiles are tuned per keycap profile (Cherry, OEM, SA, XDA, DSA).
  • Your molds, your property. Doubleshot molds we fabricate for your project belong to you. If you ever switch factories, we ship the molds to your next partner — no hostage negotiations.
  • English-speaking project management. Color comments, legend adjustments, packaging feedback — all handled directly without translation lag.
  • Pre-production samples included in every quote. We don’t charge extra for samples. You get 3–5 sets to inspect before production begins. One round of revisions is included; additional rounds at cost.

Start your PBT keycap project

Send us your design concept — even a rough sketch or mood board. Within 48 hours you’ll get:

  • Method recommendation (dye-sub vs doubleshot vs UV) based on your design, budget, and quantity
  • Line-item quote with mold fees, per-unit pricing at 2–3 MOQ levels, packaging, and freight estimate
  • Timeline including sample production, your approval window, and full production lead time

Request Your Quote →

Prefer to talk first? sales@allwinkey.com — we respond within 24 hours.


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Frequently Asked Questions

Doubleshot keycaps have legends molded in a second plastic for permanent, high-contrast text, while dye-sub uses heat to infuse ink into the PBT, allowing for complex, multi-color designs.

Yes, many custom PBT keycaps manufacturers, like AllwinKey, offer both methods, allowing brands to choose based on design needs and budget.

Brands should evaluate the manufacturer's experience with PBT material, quality control for consistent thickness and color, and ability to meet MOQ and lead time requirements.

AllwinKey, a leading custom PBT keycaps manufacturer, explains that the choice between doubleshot, dye-sublimation, and OEM production methods depends on the desired durability, color complexity, and budget. Doubleshot PBT keycaps offer permanent legends and high contrast, while dye-sublimation allows for intricate, full-color designs on PBT material. OEM keycaps manufacturing provides a standard profile and cost-effective solution for keyboard brands seeking reliable, high-volume production.

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