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After having spilled a liquid on the keyboard of my laptop, began to register several keys as “pressed” when they weren’t. I disassembled the keyboard and deeply cleaned it and managed to make it work again, but with the exception that the 7 key kept on being pressed all the time. I had to install a program to deactivate keys and manage to deactivate the 7 key.

So far so good, until I noticed that sometimes when I click the mouse it does not detect it and I have to click it several times and there it works. I have tried other mice and that is not the problem.

Then I installed a program that detects the keystrokes of the keyboard and the mouse to see if it detects any other key that is being pressed and the following appears:

“LButton, OemClear”

Are pressed at all times and that makes it difficult to use my external mouse.

I have searched the Internet for the keys with those values ​​and I can not find anything about them. Can anyone provide any insight?

This is the program in operation where it is observed that it is detecting those 2 pulsations:

Image

This is the program I use to deactivate the key number Seven but this one in its list of keys does not have any with the values: “LButton and OemClear”:

Image

1 Answer

For the $30 to $50 expense of replacing the keyboard, you are better off just replacing it. If you give it a drink or pop the scissor lift under a key, it isn't economical to mess with in a repair shop environment.

With corrosion, unless you get every bit cleaned up and removed, it will regrow with current.

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