Jumpy erratic cursor/arrow - Moves & Selects without touching

I have a jumpy erratic curso that moves and selects without me touching the trackpad at all. It's driving me crazy. It makes it practically impossible to use my macbook. The trackpad is clean. I'm literally not touching it when the arrow moves around and selects things. When I try to move the arrow/cursor, it either moves jumpily or selects anything it passes over. Help!

MacBook Pro, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.2)

Posted on Mar 11, 2013 8:06 PM

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124 replies

May 9, 2013 8:09 AM in response to erfn

You have gotten your trackpad wet and the moisture is still inside. Have a look here for a solution. It is quite simple.


That is one possible explanation. However, if there was a spill, it occured at the time this topic was started (about two months ago), so it's dry by now. Putting rice on the trackpad isn't going to do a thing at this point.

May 13, 2013 10:08 AM in response to Esor Asil

I have same problem on my macbook air.


I have

1. powered down the machine a few times. no help.


2. cleaned the trackpad. no help.


3. changed the speed of the trackpad. no help.


Here is my last test to recreate the problem:

Gave it a clean start by turnning off / on.

On startup, at desktop, with no app on, place your finger on the trackpad and do circular motion on the trackpad. After a few circles, it picks up a "selection" box as if I have double clicked. And now I have a selection box doing circles on the screen.


Basically, it is making a selection by itself.


no problem with the machine if I use arrows or tabs.


Hope this helps.

May 20, 2013 6:50 AM in response to wn-nj

I had similar issues the past couple of days - the cursor was going between jumpy and non-responsive, mistaking single finger for double finger gestures, etc. It was almost completely unusable as a pointing device. I had used the trackpad recently with sweaty hands after a workout so I figured there might be some sort of conductive "deposit" that was affecting the capacitance of the trackpad. I took a dry Q-tip and ran it around the boundary of the trackpad, pressing down firmly enough to depress the trackpad and make it "click". My thought was to let the cotton fibers run between the trackpad and the metal case of my (brand new) 13" MacBook Pro since the clearance is very tight.


So far the tracking function is back to normal.

May 26, 2013 4:15 AM in response to Esor Asil

Hi


I have had a similar problem (slow bluetooth keyboard and drunk jumpy external trackpad) and found a solution via trial and error.


Some people suggested that the problem is due to interference from wifi and the bluetooth periferals...


I have confirmed this because the problems go away if you turn of wifi - so there is an issue there, this has only started happening with my new tp link router...


Of course its not much use if you can;t get online with your trackpad etc.


What I found is that in the router setup if I manually chose the channel rather than leaving it set to auto then the problems disapeared - so it looks like the scanning for the best channel (ie checking for interference) by some routers can cause your external bluetooth trackpad and keyboards to act very strangely...


This has been simple to cure in my case - well after a lot of mucking around so I thought I would share this solution around.


Matt

May 26, 2013 8:44 PM in response to Esor Asil

Hi Esor,


I occasionally,over the past year, have also experienced the same wacky (unpredictable) behavior with my magic trackpad.


I too have tried cleaning the trackpad surface to no avail/improvement.


Today I figured out how to fix this flakyness, wild/erratic behaviour by the magic trackpad for me: I was getting quite frustrated about this problem until I noticed my battery are not screwed in 100% tight! Since tightening the screw cap using a coin to tighten, locking the fastening down as tight as it can go, the functionality has returned to normal/fixed itself.


I moved my iMac from one house to another & maybe the vibration loosened off the trackpads battery connection ever so slightly.


Hope you can have the same outcome.

Sep 25, 2013 5:45 AM in response to Esor Asil

Hi I had the same issue, I remembered that an update for Tekkit was installed around the same time as the issue occurring. I believe it may be a java app causing the issues for you all, I deleted the Tekkit java App and the issue has been resolved, after reinstalling the app there is still no issue I believe the app may have been corrupted through the install.


I hope this helps you all


Many thanks Dave.

Sep 26, 2013 1:13 PM in response to drewtlove

I, who experienced the same problem with my track pad (mac book pro 2011) for some weeks now, thought there would be nobody out there with the same "anarchistic way of behaving mouse-trackpad". But obviously I was wrong. By trial and error I´ve noticed that it helped (temporary) to:


1. close the top, wait for a while and open it again.

2. let the battery get out of charge - totally - and recharge it (it helped for at least two days)


Now I use a usb-mouse until I can take it to service. I will sure show this thread to them when I get there!

Sep 26, 2013 1:18 PM in response to Imargelia

This is excessively bad advice! What you are recommending really just amounts to ignoring the symptoms and hoping that the problem goes away. If this is being caused by a swollen battery, ignoring it could result in permanent damage to the computer. If it is actually being caused by someone accessing the computer remotely, ignoring it gives them more opportunities to do something malicious.

Sep 27, 2013 9:20 AM in response to thomas_r.

Same problem, read all through the threads in this forum. maybe this would work for others who tried all the options posted but failed to solve the problem even when doing so. This worked for me: If you have Folx download manager or any download manager in mac that is not supported already by the latest Mac OS X, uninstall it, remove it. Also remove input managers folder that came along with the folx downloader. hope this would work on others having the same problem.

Sep 28, 2013 7:44 AM in response to Esor Asil

I wonder how many of you had this problem after somehow getting the trackpad wet. Because that's when this problem occured with me: few drops of condensation from a nicely chilled glass of wine hit the trackpad and it went berserk. The problem persisted for days. After reading Nine Bravo's reply (one of the few that address moisture) I simply depressed the trackpad close to edge and ran my finger around the border (meanwhile taking care that this wasn't causing unwanted onscreen action). It helped immediately.


Possible explanation: the glass trackpad is so tightly fitted that water by cohesion will fill the seem causing some sort of short circuiting.

Sep 28, 2013 9:18 AM in response to Bart Oosterhoorn

Bart has the best explanation I've seen. Ultimately for me the solution was to take my PowerBook back to the Apple store where they submitted it to a tracking responsiveness diagnostic - which it failed. Apple replaced my trackpad while I waited and now it works fine. I believe even a small amount of moisture can penetrate at the edge of the trackpad and affect its ability to sense your finger, sometimes permanently.


Nine Bravo

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Jumpy erratic cursor/arrow - Moves & Selects without touching

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