this post was submitted on 15 Jan 2025
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Hey, the mouse I'm using right now is actually a Razer Deathadder V2 (wired). I've had it since just before 2020 and the left click started playing up about mid 2024. Is that a longer then normal lifespan for them? The mouse basically constantly thinks I'm double-clicking when I'm single-clicking, which gets really annoying.
I actually liked the DeathAdder and have had almost 3 of them. I just mainly meant to knock their build quality.
But that said, the lifespan of all mice is kinda bullshit. I haven't had single mouse last more than a year in almost a decade. Either the left click starts getting glitchy or the mousewheel's encoder starts to go. I've used Logitech, Razer, Microsoft, Xtrfy. My Xtrfy M42 wireless's left click is starting to get inconsistent now (holding LMB will randomly release, and the microswitch is bouncing on click).
I've even tried random ones like Acer. I liked it, but it died and they replaced it, which was cool, but it died again in the same way. I think it was battery related
Now I'm on a BenQ mouse since they seem to be used a lot in e-sports
If you own a soldering iron or are willing to buy one and learn how to use it, a new set of mouse switches is like <$10 and it takes a few mins to replace them. Not something you should have to do after only 4 years though. If you get a mouse with optical switches this issue will never happen.
I tried to repair my DeathAdder but I had the soldering iron too hot and I destroyed the contact pad under the microswitch. 💀 I tried to take some solder mask off the trace and bodge it but I made such a mess that I just gave up on it. With better desoldering technique, it would have been straightforward. Lesson learned!
Desoldering is definitely the hard part and I'm not experienced enough to tell you exactly how to do it, but what helped me was adding a tiny bit of leaded solder to loosen up the existing solder on the mouse. That made it way easier to wick up.
Thanks, I appreciate the tip! I will give that a try next time (maybe I'll do this Xtrfy mouse soon). I also got solder braid and a flux pen to help too, in addition to the solder sucker I was using before.
The sad reality is that that's going to happen to any mouse eventually. I sadly had to retire my favorite mouse ever (G600) after years of service because of this inevitability. As a bandaid you can get a program/autohotkey script that ignores double clicks that are too fast to be human.