It's important for touch typing to have a good hysteresis between make and break and to have a uniform and progressive pressure building up to break-point. Some sound is also helpful.
Far from being loud, it would have been quieter than a room full of typewriters, let alone line printers.
https://sharktastica.co.uk/wiki?id=ibmbucklingspring
https://patents.google.com/patent/US3699296A/en
https://patents.google.com/patent/US4118611A/en
All that being said, I use a keyboard with cherry green switches and they're OK. It's not got quite as nice of a hysteresis curve, but you can see from the diagrams in the links above why that buckling spring is just a really clever way to make a very nice feel.
The B in IBM dates from them selling cash registers and calculators to business. They'd been in keyboards a long long time.