Thread: Mouse Refurbish
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Old October 14th 19, 11:00 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.general,alt.windows7.general,sci.electronics.repair
Rene Lamontagne
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Default Mouse Refurbish

On 2019-10-14 4:45 p.m., Ken Blake wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2019 14:06:36 -0500, Rene Lamontagne
wrote:

On 2019-10-14 1:34 p.m., Ken Blake wrote:
On Mon, 14 Oct 2019 11:24:38 -0500, Rene Lamontagne
wrote:

On 2019-10-14 10:33 a.m., J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
In message , Ken Blake
writes:
On Sun, 13 Oct 2019 23:25:27 +0100, "J. P. Gilliver (John)"
wrote:

In message , Paul in Houston TX
writes:
Ken Blake wrote:
[]
Each to his own. Mice are very cheap these days. I wouldn't dream of
spending 20 minutes, the cost of new microswitches, soldering iron,
and solder to save $20 or so for a new mouse.

That's assuming the model the OP likes is still available; I think he
thought it wasn't, but someone here found them.


No, to me, it would hardly matter whether it was still available. If
my mouse died, and was no longer available, I'd find another one that
was close enough to the old one, so I would like it just as much. I
might even find a new one I liked more.

As an example of what I mean, earlier this year I used aÂ* Logitech
M500 mouse which I liked very much. If it died, I would have replaced
it with the same model, if it was still available. But then I was at
someone's office and he was using an Anker 2.4G Wireless Vertical
Ergonomic Optical Mouse. I tried it at his office and immediately
liked it better than my Logitech, so I ordered one from Amazon ($20).
It's now my favorite; I no longer use the Logitech.

(You must be right-handed.)

Mice are no different from most other things. Newer models are usually
better than older ones.

So you're a replacer. Some of us see fixing things as a challenge - and
one we enjoy, to some extent; there's great satisfaction, for us, in
returning something to working order, especially if the fix was
something trivial (especially if it wasn't obvious).

I don't deny that there comes a point where further effort is no longer
enjoyable, and I just replace; that point varies depending on lots of
things - the cost of the item, how much I like it anyway, my mood, and
my age (I'm giving up sooner, or not starting at all, more as I age). If
there's something, the use of which frustrates me, and it fails, I'll be
delighted to have an excuse to replace it.

My whole life has been spent fixing things, 17 years as an Auto
mechanic, 30 years as a Power engineer, Boilers, air handlers, pumps and
fans plus many years concurrently as a sideline Doing radio, TV,
computer and all other electronic repairs.
So, Yeah, you might say I enjoy fixing things.


Leaving aside the enjoying fixing things, I envy your ability to do.
Sometimes fixing is the only choice, and I've never been good at it.


Coincidentally a couple days ago my son complained that his Logitech
M510 mouse was getting very stiff to turn the scroll wheel, naturally
out came the screwdriver set and 2 screws under the AA cells had it apart.
Well what I found was a pile of accumulated lint wrapped around the
shaft of the wheel, Cleanded it all out and added a small shot of
contact cleaner to the bearings and reassembled it and now it works like
new again.


I might not have succeeded, but that's the kind of thing I might have
tried to fix. I would have suspected lint, and if my suspicion was
right, fixing it would probably have been easy. And worst case, if I
failed, I'd just buy him a new one.


I think you probably would have succeeded, It was fairly straight
forward (no loose parts flying everywhere), Don't undersell yourself,
I'm 85 and can still do it.



We're almost the same age. I'm about to turn 82. But my thought that I
might not succeed is not based on my age. I've never been good at
working with my hands.


Guess I'm lucky, my hands have been my living But my eye sight is ****
poor, born that way.

Rene

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