Kensington Expert Mouse Optical USB Trackball for PC or Mac 64325


The best trackball ever made has just gotten better. Designed for PCs and Mac’s, the new Expert Mouse® employs Kensington’s Diamond Eye™ optical technology for smooth, precise cursor movement. Surrounding the ball, we have a brand new implementation of our award winning Scroll Ring™ that puts scrolling right at your fingertips. More comfortable than ever, the Expert Mouse® even comes with a soft new wrist rest-right in the box! You get all of these great new features along with the same, large ball, exceptional control, and ease-of-use that has set the industry standard for more than 15 years.

$ 77.24


[wpramareviews asin=”B00009KH63″]

3 thoughts on “Kensington Expert Mouse Optical USB Trackball for PC or Mac 64325

  1. 210 of 219 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Buy Without Fear, February 4, 2004
    By 
    Platypus Rex “Not My Real Name” (New York City, USA) –

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Kensington Expert Mouse Optical USB Trackball for PC or Mac 64325 (Personal Computers)

    Almost every day I work for hours using a Computer Aided Design program, and over the years have found the Kensington Expert Trackball to be an indispensible labor (and arm) saving device. You get so much with so little movement! I was looking to buy a new one.
    I had misgivings about this product after reading some “Worse than Bad” reviews that were in this forum. Still, either because hope springs eternal or a fool and his money are soon parted, I went ahead and ordered one.
    Out of the box ball rotation was _The Worst_ as others had said. I had deadlines, however, so decided to use it to see if anything would improve. Two hours later it had “broken in”.
    Trackball Wizards, my number five is on the trophy shelf. The Seven is AAMMAAZZIINNGG. Totally silent movement; virtually frictionless rotation; excellent functionality, and it has GOT to have one of the most eloquent designs of any input device on the market.
    As an added bonus the scroll ring beats any scroll wheel I have used, anywhere.
    Congratulations to Kensington for creating a truly superior product.

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

  2. 86 of 90 people found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Major improvements to a classic design, November 21, 2003
    By 
    Shelley Gammon “Geek” (Kaufman, Texas USA) –
    (VINE VOICE)
      
    (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
      
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Kensington Expert Mouse Optical USB Trackball for PC or Mac 64325 (Personal Computers)

    This is a superior alternative to the silver and blue USB model by Kensington with the awkwardly placed scrollwheel. Kensington brings back their award-winning classic design, adds a scroll wheel around the ball (programmable for lefties or righties!), a free attachable wristpad and all using optics – no more skin, hair and potato chip crumbs getting stuck in scroll wheels… it’s all done using light.

    My less than perfect rating is for the less-than-fluid turning of the scroll wheel. It sometimes feels like you’re grinding coffee when you’re turning it. Sometimes it’s smooth like butter, other times, it seems to skip a little… and it’s not due to debris, since it’s been like this since I got it out of the box.

    This is something Kensington needs to iron out in their next model.

    Despite this one flaw, this is simply the best their is and there’s a good reason why this mouse flies off the shelves at nearly 100 bucks a pop – it’s because it’s the best input device alternative to a mouse – ever – anywhere.

    Do your wrist a favor and treat yourself to navigating in joy.

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

  3. 176 of 194 people found the following review helpful
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    it had a lot of potential, April 5, 2006
    By 

    Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Kensington Expert Mouse Optical USB Trackball for PC or Mac 64325 (Personal Computers)

    I got this trackball because of wrist pains in my mouse hand. I will give my complete unbiased review here.

    First, it is very pretty. The buttons are nice looking and easily clicked. The ball is a nice size.

    The trackball comes with a wrist rest, however it is not comfortable if you use your fingertips to move the ball. In fact, the Kensington documentation states that your hand should “hover” when using your fingertips to move the ball. The reason is, when you move the ball towards you, your fingers have to bend and your wrist bends upwards. In order to keep your wrist straight, you have to hover your palm over the wrist rest. So why did they include a wrist rest?

    The only other configuration possible is to rest the blade of your hand, pinky side down, on the wrist rest and use your thumb to move the ball. This position feels good, however I found I am much less accurate with my thumb. Also if you have any thumb pain, this position is not feasible.

    The scroll ring is a very nice feature. However, as everyone else has found, it sounds like it has sand in it when rotated. I took it apart and lubed it with a plastic safe grease. Even though I worked the grease into the mechanism, the plastic bearings still make the grinding sound while saturated in grease. I can’t get to them to see if they can be replaced without breaking the plastic, which has been melted closed.

    The ball was stiff out of the box. The ball sits on three very tiny red balls, which act as bearings. Remove the ball and put a small dab of grease on these bearings, replace the ball and spin it, then remove the ball and clean it. Clean up all the lube from the bearings so they don’t get the ball greasy. Then ball is then VERY smooth, with none of the “static friction” that is mentioned in other reviews. The grease to use is Radio Shack Multi-Purpose Lube Gel item #64-2326. Any plastic safe, non-evaporating lube should work.

    I imagine after a few hours of use the ball would also become “broken in” and loose, but probably still not as good as with the lube.

    After two days of use, two of the three small plastic cups that hold the little red ball bearings for the main ball broke. It seems the only way for this to happen would be if I dropped the ball in the socket very hard, which I did NOT do. The little cups do seem that the are easily broken, though I have not read anyone else having this same problem, so it could be an isolated incident. I have contacted Kensington for a replacement. I hope they can help. If I can keep my broken trackball, I will take apart the scroll ring bearings and see if it can be improved.

    The drivers for the device are superb, although the user interface is sometimes awkward. You can set actions for each of the four buttons or when you press the top two or bottom two at the same time. Further, you can have it do different actions when any of those buttons are pressed with ctrl, alt, shift, or any combination of the three.

    The actions you can take are extensive. You can run an application, simulate a series of key presses, paste some text, close applications, show a customizable menu, maximize windows, etc. Good job Kensington!

    The acceleration settings are very important. The trackball has to be accurate for small movements, yet you shouldn’t have to paw at the thing to move the cursor across the whole screen. This cannot be accomplished using any combination of the “fine tuning” controls the driver provides. The acceleration curve they allow you to create is much too linear.

    Fortunately there is still hope. On Windows, in your user’s home directory, look in Application DataKensingtonMouseWorks. You will find a KMW_Preferences.xml file. Edit this file with a text editor and you can define your own acceleration curve. To do so, under “Acceleration” set the “Level” to 1, then modify the numbers of the first “Multipliers” entry. I found 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 13, 20, 26, 36, 90, 90 to work exactly like I want. After editing and saving the file, run the kmw_prb_xml.exe file in your MouseWorks installation directory. This will causes your changes to the XML file to be applied. Then if you go to the acceleration page in the driver, you will see your custom acceleration curve on their little graph!

    With my custom acceleration curve I can accurately make small movements for clicking links, menu items, and expanding folders while navigating a filesystem. Also, I can travel the whole screen height with just one movement of the trackball. Perfect! Kudos to Kensington for allowing the preferences file to be customized so easily and for providing such great options for configuring the button presses.

    The device had a lot of potential. If Kensington would make the scroll ring silky smooth and make the little red ball bearings more durable, the product would be amazing. As it is now, the scroll ring…

    Read more

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

Comments are closed.