Razer Naga Trinity OMRON D2FC-F-K(50M) Micro Switch Replacement
Introducción
Ir al paso 1If the right or left mouse button is not responsive, the micro switch might need replacement. This guide will list all required steps to properly replace the left and/or right mouse button micro switches from the Razer Naga Trinity.
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Herramientas
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Remove one 4mm black Phillips #000 screw from the left side of the mouse holding the scroll wheel LED controller board.
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Then pull the LED controller board upwards and out.
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Herramienta utilizada en este paso:Halberd Spudger$2.99
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Pry and remove the scroll wheel feedback bar from its hold-down clips using the hook end of a halberd spudger.
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Herramienta utilizada en este paso:Tweezers$3.99
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Remove the scroll wheel feedback bar from the scroll wheel by holding down the spring and using angled tweezers to remove it from its placement.
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Remove the USB Type A to 5-pin connector from the main board by pinching and pulling upwards.
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To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.
To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.
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14 comentarios
dont bother. It took me 2 hours to get it replace and left click still dident work even when i heared it click. Just work some over time at work and buy a new
If the switch is still clicking and you tried replacing it, the issue surely is somewhere else.
You should look if there are other parts inside that look “
Andreas -
I was in contact with Razer support for about a week now before getting the usual response “sorry I checked, we don’t have any replacement parts” and basically told me to go &&^& myself and buy a new one.
I spent more than 100€ on this thing yet whenever I ask support ANYTHING it always boils down to this. This is the third time with three different Razer devices and I always get the same answer.
I’ll try this fix here and if that doesn’t work, this was surely the last time Razer got a single cent out of me.
If you're not afraid of working with very small parts you can also try fixing the switch itself. You have to bend a small metal lip and that should fix the issue.
Here is a guide on how to do it, fixed my mouse with that one just half an hour ago.
30-60 minutes? The author is liar! Took me 4 hours to complete just the step 15 “desolder the faulty switch” :D. For some reason I could not suck out all of the molten solder and it was always stuck somewhere. Really pain in the a**. Other parts of the guide made opening the mouse, disassembly and assembly rather very easy process. Soldering in new part as well. Transplantation is now complete and the patient survived. Thanks for the guide