This is an Apple Desktop Bus mouse II, as labeled on the bottom of the mouse.
Its the oval mechanical mouse. The one that the square mouse evolved into.
Sometimes a simple cleaning from outside the hole is not enough. My oval mouse has reached that point.
The square mouse had screws, and allowed you to get inside and give it a good (careful) cleaning.
Instead of screws accessible from the bottom, the oval mouse is locked together by plastic tabs on the inside, which are visible thru the hole.
It clearly appears that a specially made tool could fit inside the mouse through the hole and squeeze the tabs in the proper way so that the mouse could be cracked open without any damage, thus allowing me to remove what must be a massively long hair wrapped around something that I cant get to from the outside.
I can't find any reference to such a tool in google searches, ebay, etc...
Yet I find it hard to believe that every time a tech guy in the shop gets a mouse that can't be cleaned well enough thru the hole, it simply gets tossed and the user is told to buy a new mouse.
So: the real question is...
Whats it take to get my hands on this mysterious tool?
Or, can a repair shop tech guy absolutely, positively, say that such a tool does not exist, and old ovals are tossed rather than cleaned / repaired?
Wexx
Its the oval mechanical mouse. The one that the square mouse evolved into.
Sometimes a simple cleaning from outside the hole is not enough. My oval mouse has reached that point.
The square mouse had screws, and allowed you to get inside and give it a good (careful) cleaning.
Instead of screws accessible from the bottom, the oval mouse is locked together by plastic tabs on the inside, which are visible thru the hole.
It clearly appears that a specially made tool could fit inside the mouse through the hole and squeeze the tabs in the proper way so that the mouse could be cracked open without any damage, thus allowing me to remove what must be a massively long hair wrapped around something that I cant get to from the outside.
I can't find any reference to such a tool in google searches, ebay, etc...
Yet I find it hard to believe that every time a tech guy in the shop gets a mouse that can't be cleaned well enough thru the hole, it simply gets tossed and the user is told to buy a new mouse.
So: the real question is...
Whats it take to get my hands on this mysterious tool?
Or, can a repair shop tech guy absolutely, positively, say that such a tool does not exist, and old ovals are tossed rather than cleaned / repaired?
Wexx