T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2229.1 | | IFTHEN::PETERS | | Mon Feb 13 1989 14:20 | 8 |
|
I had mouse problems like this. I fixed it by cleaning the
little shinny rollers. To clean them I removed them from the
mouse and worked on them until they were shinny again.
Steve Peters
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2229.2 | | NZOV01::MCKENZIE | Nuke the Leprechaun! | Mon Feb 13 1989 18:56 | 7 |
| I did the same thing and got good results - sometimes a little bit
of dirt gets caught etc
if you havent already purchased on I'd suggest buying a mouse pad
also - their reasonably priced and make a lot of difference
Phil
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2229.3 | Loose lips sinks ships. | COMPSV::MYEE | Care about Ecology? Call 800-225-5333 | Mon Feb 13 1989 19:21 | 20 |
|
I had a similar problem. A friend of mine was playing Marble Madness
with the mouse and he was picking up the mouse and BANGing it on
the table. After he left, my mouse would not move the pointer
consistantly. I would get a noise as I moved my mouse across my
desk (it took me a while to find this out, because my mouse pad
dampen the noise). I clean the whole thing, and even took the mouse
apart. But, nothing helped. It would work for a while and then
the problem would come back.
It turned out that there was a indention in the mouse ball, but
I don't think that was the problem. I think the problem was that
the little panel at the bottom of the mouse that keeps the ball
in was loose. So, I tried to bend it abit to make the little hook
on better to the mouse. I did this about a week ago and no problems
since! Hope this helps....
=Mike
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2229.4 | Watch for this problem | MEIS::ZIMMERMAN | Ninja turtles fight with honor! | Mon Feb 13 1989 20:12 | 7 |
| My mouse got a little sluggish so I took it apart, cleaned, and
spritzed bearing points with a little Teflon spray. In the process,
I gunked up the little holes in the plastic wheel that's attached to
one of the roller spindles. They looked open, but they needed to be
REALLY open. Cleaning the wheel fixed the problem. Works fine now.
- Cliff
|
2229.5 | Old mouse New mouse | CANAM::SULLIVAN | Steven E. Sullivan | Tue Feb 14 1989 13:18 | 23 |
| I have two amigas (500 and 2000) which have different styles of
mice. The older style is like what has been described here and I have
had problems with it (mouse pad or not, though a "teflon" pad works
best) as described here. I am frequently cleaning it and the rollers
are pitted with corosion though they "feel" smooth.
The newer mouse has a different plate that the one above. It also
has plastic rollers that do not seem to accumulate dirt like the old
mouse. It is far more responsive and accurate than the old mouse.
The two varieties of mice can be distinguished easily without
taking them apart. The older mouse's plate for holding the ball in is
not round and comes out in a straight sliding motion. It has four
small teflon pads to slide on. The new mouse has a circular plate
that is removed by rotating it. It has two crescent shaped teflon
pads above and below the ball plate.
My recommendation is to get the newer style of mouse when you can
no longer stand the old one. I have not reached that point yet, but
can see it coming. Until then clean it as suggested in the previous
replies and be prepared for it to have problems again.
-SES
|
2229.6 | mouse cannot eat cat hair | JFRSON::OSBORNE | Blade Walker | Thu Feb 16 1989 08:18 | 15 |
| If you haven't completely removed the bottom plate on your mouse,
do so before investing in a new mouse. Mine began to act up, so after
the usual ball cleaning, with no improvement, I removed the bottom
plate completely to examine the roller shafts.
I have cats, and while they don't get on the computer desk, cat hair
finds its way into things. The roller shafts were jamming from cat
hair wrapped around them near the bearings. A few minutes work clears
this- and the symptoms are similar to yours- one way works, the other
jams.
Cats can be full of mouse hair without much danger, but obviously the
opposite is not true.
John O.
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2229.7 | ..and my food, and my drink, and... | LEDS::ACCIARDI | | Thu Feb 16 1989 08:20 | 5 |
|
I also had cat hairs wrapped around my mouse's bearing points.
Tweezers and compressed air got them out.
Ed.
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2229.8 | an alternative to shaving the cat ... | MEIS::ZIMMERMAN | Ninja turtles fight with honor! | Thu Feb 16 1989 10:38 | 4 |
| I saw an ad for an optical mouse in the March AmigaWorld, page 70.
The price was $114, but there are no moving parts to catch cat hair.
- Z
|
2229.9 | Dead mice don't squeak. | SUBSYS::BUSCH | Dave Busch, NKS1-2/H6 | Thu Feb 16 1989 14:39 | 12 |
| < Note 2229.5 by CANAM::SULLIVAN "Steven E. Sullivan" >
-< Old mouse New mouse >-
I had the exact same problem, and solution. The mouse that came with my A500
when I bought it in October had the "slide out" ball retainer. I tried
lubricating, cleaning etc. but not much good. There seemed to be a problem with
the third wheel inside, the one that presses the ball against the other two
wheels. Finally, in desperation, I took it back to the Memory Location in
Wellesley MA. and they cheerfully gave me one of the newer ones with the
circular retaining plates in exchange.
Dave
|
2229.10 | If it comes to the crunch... | FLOCON::KENNEDY | | Sun Feb 19 1989 06:16 | 17 |
| If you do have to invest in a new mouse, I've seen an ad in a UK
magazine for Amiga mice for #24.99 (that's about $42) from a company
called DATEL ELECTRONICS. The ad reads;
REPLACEMENT MOUSE
- Fully Amiga compatible
- Rubber coated ball
- Optical type
There's a picture too and the thing doesn't look bad.
I think DATEL are a UK company and I know that they have a
distributor in the states as I saw an ad in january's AmigaWorld,
if not they do ship overseas.
Keith
|
2229.11 | Bouncing mouse buttons | FORTY2::TATHAM | Nick Tatham @REO | Sun Feb 19 1989 14:45 | 25 |
|
A different mouse problem is a bouncing button. I fixed mine thanks to some
information in a letter in an old Amiga magazine, so here is the letter
typed in in case it can help someone else:
"I recently discovered a mouse cure that may be helpful to others. When I
clicked on an icon, it acted as if I had double clicked it, and when I used
sizing gadgets, they wouldn't always work smoothly. It was as if the
computer was receiving the wrong number of mouse-button clicks. I opened
the mouse to see if it was a dirty switch.
To do this, turn the power off and disconnect the mouse from the computer.
Remove the two screws on the bottom where the cable comes into the mouse.
This will expose two wafer switches. The switches consist of a dome-shaped
piece of metal with a dimple in the centre held over a C-shaped
printed-circuit trace with tape. The dimple of the upper contact should be
centred so that the mouse button hits it -- mine was off centre. (You
should notice marks on the tape where the mouse button is making contact.)
I removed the tape, recentred the contact on the trace and replaced the
tape. I haven't had any problems with misinterpreted mouse clicks since."
Hope that helps someone - it did me.
Nick
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2229.12 | Look inside at the action. | VCSESU::MOORE | Tom Moore MRO1-3/SL1 297-5224 | Sun Feb 26 1989 16:14 | 10 |
| For what it's worth, I have one of the new type and have had problems
lately. I have a mouse pad, and everything's about 15 months old. My
mouse was hanging going left and up. I first cleaned out all the dirt
on the rollers and the lint and fuzz around the axle. This did not
seem to fix the problem. Today I took off the top and watched it
work. The ball was sliding on the mat. I wiped the ball real hard with
a cloth and it seems O.K. again. I still don't know what is causing it
to hang. it might be the third roller. Taking the top off was real
helpful to understand the problem.
-Tom-
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