Razor Lachesis problems

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Joined
8 Aug 2008
Posts
266
I was wondering if anyone can give me a hand with this mouse.

I purchased it a few weeks back together with a Vista PC. Now the mouse seems to be hard to control especially when I have my speakers on it seems to shake on the screen and its pretty hard to control in that situation. My question is that is the mouse oversenstive i.e picking up vibrations from the sound? the actual mouse isnt moving but the actual pointer is!...... when i have sound off it seems sometimes a bit hard to control occasionally not sure why :(
 
Have you got the latest drivers / software / firmware installed ??

I had a similar problem until I updated my firmware

Some people also benefit from removing the silver coloured sticker from the base

Also, form the RazerZone Site:

" RAZER LACHESIS : WINDOWS XP : RESOLUTION 26504

Q: My mouse cursor drifts
A: Place vibrating objects on a different surface to the Lachesis, or use a harder mouse pad.

The Lachesis is a very sensitive device, especially at high resolutions. If the mouse is operated near a source of vibration (hard drive, table fan, sub-woofer etc) the sensor may pick up these vibrations as movement, causing the cursor to slowly drift. This effect may be made worse with a �springy� mouse pad, which may amplify the amount of movement experienced."
 
Also

"Product Name: Razer Lachesis

PROBLEM:
It is hard to achieve cursor accuracy during clicking or double clicking. When I click, the mouse cursor moves even though I don’t want it to.


SOLUTION:
Due to our extremely sensitive laser sensor, clicking at high DPI settings can cause the mouse to move one or two counts/pixels by itself. This is more apparent on soft mats as surface warping occurs easily. If you’re experiencing cursor accuracy issues,

1) Download the high precision mouse tool(beta). LINK

Basically, when you press down on a mouse button, the Lachesis will now monitor a window of X milliseconds (0 to 160ms), during which, if in ANY FRAME it detects movement EQUAL OR LESS than Y counts (0 to 5), it will ignore the data as unintentional movement by you.

For example, a gamer's hand isn't very steady when he double click or slow snipe. He typically sets X to 100ms, and Y to 1 pixel. This allows him to double click accurately, and he won't suffer when he's making fast click and drag motions either. "
 
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