View Full Version : mouse goes sticky
coffee man
December 27th 03, 12:29 PM
Have a sticky mouse...every couple of minutes it will just stick in
one spot and after moving the mouse erratically on my desk it will
come unstuck again...it will be ok for a while then it will get stuck
again...this is driving me nuts...i have tried other mouses with the
same result.......my system is an AMD XP 2600 with 512MB ram and a
large almost empty hard disk...the os is XP home SP1...the mouse is a
generic PS2 twin button wheelie mouse.......
be gratefull for any tips or info
Kadaitcha Man
December 27th 03, 12:29 PM
coffee man wrote:
> Have a sticky mouse...every couple of minutes it will just stick in
> one spot and after moving the mouse erratically on my desk it will
> come unstuck again...it will be ok for a while then it will get stuck
> again...this is driving me nuts...i have tried other mouses with the
> same result.......my system is an AMD XP 2600 with 512MB ram and a
> large almost empty hard disk...the os is XP home SP1...the mouse is a
> generic PS2 twin button wheelie mouse.......
> be gratefull for any tips or info
Read this: http://kadaitcha.ath.cx/troubleshoot.aspx#a
"How to Troubleshoot By Using the Msconfig Utility"
Also read these: http://kadaitcha.ath.cx/troubleshoot.aspx#k
"How to Perform a Clean Boot" and "How to Perform Advanced Clean-Boot
Troubleshooting"
--
Kadaitcha Man: Usenet Anarchist - http://kadaitcha.kicks-ass.org:83/
Anarchy is having to put up with things that **** you off.
Kadaitcha Man: Moderator, 24hoursupport.helpdesk
tcblack
December 27th 03, 12:30 PM
In article <3f0294a3.3128218@news-server>, said...
> Have a sticky mouse...every couple of minutes it will just stick in
> one spot and after moving the mouse erratically on my desk it will
> come unstuck again...it will be ok for a while then it will get stuck
> again...this is driving me nuts...i have tried other mouses with the
> same result.......
>
Sounds like your mouse guts are getting clogged up. You can remove the
base, and the ball and scrape the hard film off the rollers.
Alternatlively get an optical mouse, they run $15 and up.
--
Pastor Thomas C. Black
Fame Evangelical Church
Moweaqua, IL. 62550
www.frontiernet.net/~tcblack
MSF
December 27th 03, 12:34 PM
>-----Original Message-----
>In article <3f0294a3.3128218@news-server>,
said...
>
>> Have a sticky mouse...every couple of minutes it will
just stick in
>> one spot and after moving the mouse erratically on my
desk it will
>> come unstuck again...it will be ok for a while then it
will get stuck
>> again...this is driving me nuts...i have tried other
mouses with the
>> same result.......
Question is is your mouse, the physical device or your
cursor, the on screen image.
If it is the cursor then you can try to rollback the
drivers by going to mouse properties under control panel.
If that doesn't work then try to use an USB mouse instead
of a PS2 and see if that works.
Bruce Chambers
December 27th 03, 12:37 PM
Greetings --
Flip the mouse over, remove the housing that holds the ball, clean
both the ball and the rollers now exposed on the interior of the
mouse. Reassemble.
Bruce Chambers
Help us help you:
http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
----
You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don't ever count on
having both at once. -- RAH
"coffee man" > wrote in message
news:3f0294a3.3128218@news-server...
> Have a sticky mouse...every couple of minutes it will just stick in
> one spot and after moving the mouse erratically on my desk it will
> come unstuck again...it will be ok for a while then it will get
stuck
> again...this is driving me nuts...i have tried other mouses with the
> same result.......my system is an AMD XP 2600 with 512MB ram and a
> large almost empty hard disk...the os is XP home SP1...the mouse is
a
> generic PS2 twin button wheelie mouse.......
> be gratefull for any tips or info
>
Bee
December 27th 03, 12:38 PM
When I first had my new optical mouse to replace the old, still usable, ball
mouse that came with my computer, some six months ago, I inadvertently
plugged it in the wrong socket at the back of the computer case, and went on
to install the mouse driver ( can't remember the exact sequence of events).
Then, the mouse pointer movements all went wrong. It behaved exactly as you
described with your mouse. It had a mind of its own. Of course, the first
thing that came to mind was that I was given a dud mouse. When I realized
the mistake (I picked out the user's manual and started reading only then,
you see <g>), I had to do a clean install of the OS and plugged the mouse,
this time correctly, in the USP socket. The mouse and the computer lived
happily ever after.
I strongly suspect, coffee man, that your mouse driver has corrupted itself
and/or corrupted the OS for some reason.
By the way, please do not cross post. It is very much *against the rule* in
addressing newsgroups; an action like this, ignorant, inconsiderate, stupid
or otherwise, easily makes participants hot under the collar. You won't
like to destroy this very busy group where everyone taking part is
contributing out of their free time, without pay, simply wanting to share
their experience, and the fun along the way, would you?
--
Bee
[I have found my Shangri-La, at the moment, in ntlworld.]
---
"coffee man" > wrote in message
news:3f0294a3.3128218@news-server...
> Have a sticky mouse...every couple of minutes it will just stick in
> one spot and after moving the mouse erratically on my desk it will
> come unstuck again...it will be ok for a while then it will get stuck
> again.....<snip>
Bee
December 27th 03, 12:38 PM
On reading my post, I realized there was something missing. The original
optical mouse plug was for an analog socket. I had to use an USP plug
adapter that came with the package for the USP socket. Secondly, at about
the same time, I was checking out an infra-red adapter for my camera. Now,
trying to recall exactly what happened, I am not too sure which device I
connected up wrongly to the computer that produced the abnormal mouse
behaviour. Whichever it was, it was corrected by a fresh, clean install of
Window XP. The reasoning is still valid: the driver and/or the OS was
corrupted. The fact that you had tried other mice and had the same result
demands an explanation other than sticky movements of your own ball mouse.
--
Bee
[I have found my Shangri-La, at the moment, in ntlworld.]
---
"Bee" > wrote in message
...
> When I first had my new optical mouse to replace the old, still usable,
ball
> mouse that came with my computer, some six months ago, I inadvertently
> plugged it in the wrong socket at the back of the computer case, and went
on
> to install the mouse driver ( can't remember the exact sequence of
events).
> Then, the mouse pointer movements all went wrong. It behaved exactly as
you
> described with your mouse. It had a mind of its own. Of course, the
first
> thing that came to mind was that I was given a dud mouse. When I realized
> the mistake (I picked out the user's manual and started reading only then,
> you see <g>), I had to do a clean install of the OS and plugged the mouse,
> this time correctly, in the USP socket. The mouse and the computer lived
> happily ever after.
>
> I strongly suspect, coffee man, that your mouse driver has corrupted
itself
> and/or corrupted the OS for some reason.
>
> By the way, please do not cross post. It is very much *against the rule*
in
> addressing newsgroups; an action like this, ignorant, inconsiderate,
stupid
> or otherwise, easily makes participants hot under the collar. You won't
> like to destroy this very busy group where everyone taking part is
> contributing out of their free time, without pay, simply wanting to share
> their experience, and the fun along the way, would you?
>
> --
> Bee
> [I have found my Shangri-La, at the moment, in ntlworld.]
>
> ---
> "coffee man" > wrote in message
> news:3f0294a3.3128218@news-server...
> > Have a sticky mouse...every couple of minutes it will just stick in
> > one spot and after moving the mouse erratically on my desk it will
> > come unstuck again...it will be ok for a while then it will get stuck
> > again.....<snip>
>
>
Bee
December 27th 03, 12:43 PM
Yesterday was not my day! USP should really be USB. The socket first
attempted was a SP2 port which was of course digital, not analogue. Old
habit dies hard. Still haven't got my head round computers from hobby
analogue electronics, I guess. :o)
--
Bee
[I have found my Shangri-La, at the moment, in ntlworld.]
---
"Bee" > wrote in message
...
> On reading my post, I realized there was something missing. The original
> optical mouse plug was for an analog socket. I had to use an USP plug
> adapter that came with the package for the USP socket.
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