The Top 5 Most Asked Questions About Best 3d Mouse For Fusion 360 Student Autodesk Renewal By AndersonI run the same setup in the office and at home but I concede the trackball throws most people and they struggle at first after using mice for most of their lives. We have Identical thin client setups one on the LAN where our CAD station is located and one at a remote site. There is some sort of Latency issue with the WAN connection that is all that is left to diagnose as both zero clients are exactly identical in every way and they both connect to the same CAD station. I have been using a Microsoft Comfort Optical 4500 mouse because, like you, I can pan with it! I set an app-specific autocad setting for the β€left side buttonβ€ set at β€middle clickβ€. Pushing down on the scroll wheel to pan is too hard to push all the time, esp with carpal tunnel. The only problem I have with this mouse now is the fact that it has me discontinued. I have used almost all of the Logitech mice over the 20 years I have been designing in AutoCAD 2D the only Logitech mouse that stood out before I switched to a Roccat Leadr was The G700s. I’m only using 3 profiles at the moment. That has almost all of the CAD commands I use. Roccat Leadr mouse is the best mouse I have used for standard 2D drawing for residential and commercial plans for the last 5 or 6 year. It has 16 programmable buttons each with 2 functions per profile. This actually allows you to have 28 CAD commands programmed into each profile plus left & right and the easy-shift. Personally, I find most 3 button mice to be pretty similar in terms of navigation and general use. Sometimes it can be nice to use gaming mice with programmable buttons on the side so you can have quick access to certain commands , but that's just a matter of how quickly you like to work. A 3DConnexion 3D mouse can be a great time saver and productivity boost. It allows seamless navigation of designs. Access to quick tools. Moving your non-mouse hand off the keyboard. Onto a 3D mouse increases productivity.
And have its personal software for customization. I’ll look into all the other features you’re taking about when they appear in a mouse that doesn’t cause my hand to cramp after a couple of weeks of mouse heavy work. It is easy to move the cursor on the screen, smooth and light in hand. I am a mechanical engineer and I have worked with Design, Manufacturing and Training industries but now SourceCAD is my full-time work and I use it to train students all over the world. I also train corporate clients. Help them develop the skill set of their workforce. I am Autodesk AutoCAD Certified Professional. An Autodesk expert elite member. I am a regular contributor of AUGI World magazine and apart from SourceCAD I also develop AutoCAD video courses for Pluralsight and other E-Learning businesses. The mouse buttons are not very robust. They hardly last beyond a year of rigorous usage. I always ended up buying one mouse every year because of its unreliable clicks after a year of usage. I would suggest Logitech wireless trackball M570 because it helps you in eliminating wrist movements completely. All the navigation can be controlled simply by the use of the thumb. If you are using 3D connexion space navigator along with it then it would really make your workflow fluidic. One drawback with the Logitech mouse, and perhaps other programmable mice, is that you can’t use it with a VDI because the host computer doesn’t recognize the functionality when you plug it in. I’m in the same boat as you, absolutely love the Razer peripherals but their buttons certainly do wear out awfully quick. If anyone reading this is looking to get a Razer mouse i would most definitely avoid doing so, at least until they sort their mouse clicking issues out. Another highly rated mouse that would work well with CAD Software would be the Corsair Scimitar Pro. I’m
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