Fix your jumpy optical mouse

Security Briefs

Syndication

For the last few years, I've owned a couple of different optical mice. I started with a Logitech mouse and recently switched to a Microsoft mouse (Wireless Laser Mouse 6000). During the time I've owned these mice I've been frustrated by how they would jump around from time to time.

In the old days, I knew that to fix a standard mouse, you'd simply open the undercarriage, pop out the little ball, and scrape the crap off the rollers that accumulates over time. Voila! Your mouse would run like new. But there's no moving parts on the optical mouse, and it sure looked clean to me.

Invariably when my optical mouse would start to act up, I'd start switching surfaces, which sometimes seemed to help for awhile, but nothing really solved my problem, and I was about to go back to using a wired mouse.

Well, I feel pretty stupid, because I figured out how to fix the damn thing this morning. A bit of googling lead me to an article which said that sometimes a little hair (or a piece of dust, I'd imagine) gets trapped in with the optical sensor.

The solution?

Blow out the little hole where the optical sensor lies.

A quick puff of air cleared up my problem. Tada, new mouse. God I feel stupid. I think later today I'll pick up a dark, nonreflective mousepad to use, since this seems to be the recommended surface.


Posted Mar 05 2008, 06:19 AM by keith-brown
Filed under:

Comments

Echo Bravo wrote re: Fix your jumpy optical mouse
on 05-04-2008 6:56 AM
Technology - if it doesn't work, kick it. If it still fails to work, replace it! It seems that as technology advances the troubleshooting and solutions retreat back to the stone age.

With all the software geniuses and their ever increasing intelligent software, you'd think someone would have solved this problem by now! I'm no programmer (not since my C64 in the 80s), just a problem solver, but it seems to me that all is needed here is a bit of very basic intelligence...

If mouse input =< X then cursor output = X
If mouse input > X then ignore

I know it's a bit more complicated than that, adding in a comparison with average acceleration etc, but you'd think someone would have written a patch or one of these multi-million dollar companies would have it in their drivers already. I don't think it would be too difficult to distinguish the normal pace of a mouse's movement from a sudden thousand pixel jump, but again I am no programmer.
anonymous wrote re: Fix your jumpy optical mouse
on 08-14-2008 8:30 PM

WOW blowing the lenses ACTUALY WORKS OMG :D

jav wrote re: Fix your jumpy optical mouse
on 10-30-2008 7:03 AM

worked for me thanks was searching for software solution to this problem when came to this site and found it was lens needed cleaning thanks

Jim wrote re: Fix your jumpy optical mouse
on 12-08-2008 2:15 AM

Holy...I was messing with the settings on my Razer Copperhead for like 15 minutes trying to figure out what was wrong, and lo-and-behold, a quick puff of air to the laser lens and all is better.

Add a Comment

(required)  
(optional)
(required)  
Remember Me?