Disassemble microsoft laser mouse 8000
Sign in. United States English. Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads. Remove From My Forums. Answered by:. Archived Forums. Windows Vista Hardware. Sign in to vote. Saturday, October 11, AM. Hi Sponson, I fully understand your frustration on this issue and hope we can help you resolve the issue soon. Please perform the following steps: a. Monday, October 13, AM. I have the same problem, the scroll just crazy, some times it work, some times don't, and usually don't.
I try mouse on Mac OS X Pleas, nswer to me, is this a driver problem, or hardware deffect? Then i go back this mouse to shop. Saturday, October 31, AM. I came across this forum, and I am having same issue with this expensive microsoft mouse that don't work with window 7, the weird thing is that keyboard works Ok and the mouse wont work without the transceiver, my laptop is an HP p Elitebook.
Anyway is been a pain in th butt looking online for drivers but nothing works. Monday, February 8, AM. Aren't there any new clues what causes this? Add Comment Cancel. Step 2. Step 3. One comment. Step 4. Step 5. Step 6. Step 7. Almost done! To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order. You're Finished! Author with 3 other contributors. Great advice from mlm Just rip off the rubber wheel cover! Don't do this!!
My wheel does not work at all now! This looks nothing like my Microsoft mouse. Very helpful. For me, the first screw is a T9 Torx, not T8. Load more comments. Single Step Full Guide.
Small - px Medium - px Large - px. View Statistics:. Miss Raisinetta in her box by my side wondering why I am not scratching her this very instant. The rubber grip on the scroll wheel is definitely the weak link of this device. Everything else will still work fine on this mouse long after the scroll wheel wears out. Avoid stretching the rubber in a vain attempt to clear scrolling issues.
Instead, open the mouse for a thorough cleaning. This will be easy. Leave your battery compartment label intact. Only a set of test points exist underneath the label. Assuming that modern manufacturing eschew screws due to material cost and labor, I next guessed that the mouse snapped together similar to an iPhone.
I simply needed to pop it or pry it apart with a tiny screwdriver. That only caused aesthetic damage to the case. Ah ha!
Peeling back a corner of a plastic glide pad on the bottom of the mouse reveals a screw.
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