• Updated 2023-07-12: Hello, Guest! Welcome back, and be sure to check out this follow-up post about our outage a week or so ago.

Help: Reviving the Color Classic's Mouse

alvin777

Member
Hi. I'm reviving my Color Classic but the mouse won't work. How do you open this kind of ADB mouse? I know this mouse is robust and it must still be fixable if I could get to open it. Do you know any site that has instructions on how to open it?

 

LCGuy

LC Doctor/Hot Rodder
They all have screws on the bottom of 'em. The round ones, however, have 'em hidden under the sticker...you have to either remove the sticker or put the screwdriver through the sticker, ruining it.

 

MultiFinder

Well-known member
They're pretty basic. Just unscrew 'em and pop the two halves apart. Clean off all the little rollers that the ball touches, and clean off the ball while you're at it. If that doesn't fix it, then look around inside for any loose wires. If you don't find any, and it still doesn't work, then buy a new one on eBay for $5 :)

 

alvin777

Member
Thanks for the repky. It sounds like special screws. How many is under that sticker? Are there also screws under that slippery plastic thing too? How does this kind of mouse become dead anyway? It looks more durable even than the PC mice of today. What's usually the cause?

 

LCGuy

LC Doctor/Hot Rodder
There are exactly two (2) standard Phillips head screws underneath the sticker. Only underneath the sticker. The one on the bottom that says "Apple Desktop Bus Mouse II" and the serial number. Its usually either that the innards have just been worn out, or the cable is dodgy.

 

tomlee59

Well-known member
Most commonly, the rollers inside get gummed up and cease to spin reliably (or at all). A rolling ball is unfortunately a great device for conveying crud directly into the mouse's interior. A periodic clean usually takes care of this.

Other failures are relatively rare. I haven't seen too many other than an occasional bad IR LED or a broken cable connection. As others said, these mice are fairly robust.

 

Quadraman

Well-known member
I like repairing old mice. Prepare yourself, though. They can get pretty disgusting sometimes. You'll likely find hairballs and a gummy, slimy substance inside. You can use a wooden toothpick to get into the cracks and crevices to get everything out. I've found that most dead mice aren't really dead at all, just dirty beyond the point where they can still function.

 
Top