I'd contact Logitech support and just get a warranty replacement. I had a sticky right click on my old G502, contacted support, answered their questions and had a new 502 in less than 2 weeks.
Hello, you can avoid most of the double clicks by installing a script called "Buggy-Mouse". It blocks clicks quicker than some milliseconds. It worked great... until it started triple clicking.
I'd contact Logitech support and just get a warranty replacement. I had a sticky right click on my old G502, contacted support, answered their questions and had a new 502 in less than 2 weeks.
Problem is I bought my G600 from futureshop with my staff discount in 2012. I don't have any POP and I don't work there anymore
Quote:
Originally Posted by mtcn77
Hello, you can avoid most of the double clicks by installing a script called "Buggy-Mouse". It blocks clicks quicker than some milliseconds. It worked great... until it started triple clicking.
Opening switch fix is okay for 1-2 years old switch which is most probably within lifespan and warranty. In some cases, you can't fix it by doing that.
That mouse is from 2012. You won't even know the switch leaf condition after 4 years of metal fatigue. I'd recommend replacing the switch instead. The sparepart is cheap, a bit of soldering-desoldering, and you're done.
Opening switch fix is okay for 1-2 years old switch which is most probably within lifespan and warranty. In some cases, you can't fix it by doing that.
That mouse is from 2012. You won't even know the switch leaf condition after 4 years of metal fatigue. I'd recommend replacing the switch instead. The sparepart is cheap, a bit of soldering-desoldering, and you're done.
Reason why I posted this is because of this thread. 1.9ms is pretty good for me compared to my cheap blackweb mouse from walmart but the double click is so annoying
Not all mice have such switches but the vast majority do. And the guide might not be bit-for-bit accurate for you but you can still use it as guideline for what you're supposed to do.
There's no guarantee that your issue stems from here and will be fixed, but IMO it is worth a try since this fix lasts for a good while. If this fixes your issue but the problem returns sooner than a few months then it might not help if you do it again.
Like ImpedingMadness said, replacing with a whole new microswitch lasts longer, and it doesn't have the risks such as damaging while opening or not being able to put the leaf spring back properly again.
Anyway, try this and be very careful. Hope it helps you like it has helped me in the past.
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