this post was submitted on 30 Jul 2024
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If you have basic soldering skills and care enough to do this, the mouse buttons can be replaced for less than a dollar each. Not that this excuses Logitech's poor QA, but my ~~g502~~ g305 will last damn near forever if I keep replacing the switches like I have been.
Yep,
I tried this, but damaged my middle click in the process.
did you ever watch the youtube ‘deepdive’ into the double click?
Turns out they are using an older switch which, while great at the time, wants a higher voltage than modern, electricity diet, mice.
https://youtu.be/v5BhECVlKJA
I haven't, but I'm also an electrical engineer so I'm pretty familiar with the issue haha
Fun thing you can do, is open your mouse and look up the PN of your switch on DigiKey. Filter for components with the same package/footprint, then sort by actuation force. Get a few different ones and try them out. They sell good brands there.
I play a lot of shooters, so my left click is real easy to press, and my right click is ~3x harder.
the video makes a point that the wetting current for the switches Logitech uses is... i think 5v, however modern mice use much lower voltages. He doesn't attribute it to malice, more "we have been using this part for 2 decades, why switch"
I ordered in these myself: https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005004754399010.html but damaged the middle mouse click during disassembly.
My latest issue is the rubber on the g604 is starting to warp. No idea how I'll ever fix that in a satisfactory way.
The true Achilles heel of Logitech gear is their rubberized feeling coatings on things. My mouse's coating started to fail from daily use in a couple of years.
oh man that's what killed my MX Ergo. I'm back to using M570's with a simple plastic shell because they don't rot.
Mine started rubbing off after ~6mo
I have an old M560 that I actually really like. Other than ABS shine, the only sign of age is that the "back" button you click by nudging the scroll wheel from right to left does double clicks. Do you happen to know if that is similarly fixable?
I really should have done that. I replace capacitors in monitors and do other bits of soldering, including making my own audio cables. Seems like a natural extension. I bet I still have those mice in a storage tub.