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Logitech MX Air Rechargeable Cordless Mouse driver Download

    Logitech MX Air Rechargeable Cordless Air Mouse

    The pointer may work on a desk while the air-motion controls, media commands, or on-screen menus stay missing. The Logitech MX Air Rechargeable Cordless Mouse Driver is most useful when this older rechargeable model behaves like a plain wireless mouse instead of the hybrid desktop and air-control device it was built to be.

    The MX Air uses a 2.4 GHz micro-receiver, a charging station, a rechargeable battery, laser tracking for desk use, and motion-based control when you lift it from the surface. It also belongs to the SetPoint generation, so the software path differs from newer Logitech mice that use modern control apps.

    Many problems start because the computer loads only standard input support. That may give you basic cursor movement, but it will not always restore MenuCast controls, media commands, or the special behavior tied to the air mode. For this model, the receiver, charging base, and SetPoint profile all need attention before you blame the hardware.

    Logitech MX Air Rechargeable Cordless Windows Driver Download

    Driver Name Description Supported OS File Size Download
    SetPoint Software 64-bit Full offline SetPoint package for mouse button settings, tracking speed, hot-keys, and device-specific controls. Windows 11, Windows 10 64-bit, Windows 8 64-bit, Windows 7 64-bit 80.45 MB
    SetPoint Software 32-bit Full offline SetPoint installer for button customization, battery status, Caps Lock, and Num Lock notifications. Windows 11, Windows 10 32-bit, Windows 8 32-bit, Windows 7 32-bit 78.04 MB
    SetPoint Smart Installer Small SetPoint installer for mouse settings and hot-key support; internet is required during installation. Windows 11, Windows 10 32-bit/64-bit, Windows 8 32-bit/64-bit, Windows 7 32-bit/64-bit 4.61 MB
    Logitech Connection Utility Utility for restoring the wireless connection between the MX Air mouse and its receiver. Windows 11, Windows 10 32-bit/64-bit, Windows 8 32-bit/64-bit, Windows 7 32-bit/64-bit 1.04 MB

    Logitech MX Air Rechargeable Cordless Mac OS Driver Download

    Driver Name Description Supported OS File Size Download
    Logitech Control Center Software Mac customization software for Logitech mouse controls, pointer behavior, scrolling, and device settings. macOS 11, macOS 10.15, macOS 10.14, macOS 10.13 17.76 MB
    Logitech Control Center Software Control Center package for adjusting MX Air mouse buttons and supported Logitech device preferences on Mac. Mac OS X 10.13, Mac OS X 10.12, Mac OS X 10.11 17.15 MB
    Logitech Control Center Software Older Mac software build for configuring Logitech mouse functions and device-specific control options. Mac OS X 10.11, Mac OS X 10.10, Mac OS X 10.9, Mac OS X 10.8 17.06 MB

    Get the Micro-Receiver Recognized Before Testing Air Mode

    The MX Air cannot pair through Bluetooth and does not use a modern Unifying or Bolt receiver. It needs its own 2.4 GHz micro-receiver. If Windows shows no new input device after you plug in the receiver, change the USB port, restart the computer, and test again before opening Logitech software.

    Receiver appears but the mouse does nothing

    Start with power and distance. Place the mouse near the receiver, switch it on, and let the computer settle for a few seconds. If the cursor still does not move, dock the mouse on the charging station and confirm that it has enough charge for pairing and normal wireless operation.

    When the receiver sits behind a desktop case or inside a crowded USB hub, the MX Air may connect poorly even though the device appears in the system. Use a direct USB port during testing. After the mouse responds, move it back to your preferred location only if the connection stays steady.

    Lost receiver confusion

    A missing micro-receiver creates a hard stop. This model was not designed around interchangeable receiver families used by later Logitech products. If the original receiver is lost, downloading the Logitech MX Air Rechargeable Cordless Mouse Driver will not make a random dongle see the mouse.

    Check the storage area, old laptop bag, charging base area, and the USB ports on older computers before replacing parts. Many MX Air units survive longer than their receivers, and the symptoms can mislead you because the mouse still lights, charges, and reacts to button presses.

    SetPoint opens but does not show the device

    If SetPoint runs but the MX Air does not appear, disconnect the receiver, close SetPoint, restart the computer, and connect the receiver again after Windows finishes loading. Then open the Logitech utility. This order gives the operating system a chance to identify the hardware before SetPoint looks for it.

    Do not install several Logitech control packages together for this old mouse. Extra utilities can add services without adding MX Air support. Keep the setup limited to the receiver, the matching SetPoint-era software, and the operating system mouse settings.

    Charging Base Issues That Look Like Driver Failure

    A weak charge can create strange behavior: the pointer moves for a moment, air mode drops out, clicks stop, or the device disappears after a short idle period. Because the MX Air is rechargeable, solve power problems at the cradle before you repeat software installation.

    Mouse charges only when placed at an angle

    The charging station depends on clean contact. If charging starts only when you tilt the mouse or press it down, inspect the base and the contact points on the mouse. Remove dust with a dry cloth and reseat the mouse carefully. Avoid liquid cleaning around the electrical contacts.

    A loose power connection at the charging station can mimic a bad battery. Check the AC power cord at both ends and use a known working outlet. Leave the mouse on the base long enough to recover before judging the receiver or software side.

    Battery drains quickly after normal use

    Older rechargeable cells lose capacity. If the MX Air works after charging but fades quickly, the driver package will not restore battery health. Test after a full charge, then compare how long the mouse lasts in desk mode and in air mode. Motion control can expose weak power sooner.

    Switch the mouse off when you store it for more than a short break. The MX Air often lives near media PCs and sofa setups, where it can sit unused for days. Storage drain can make the next session look like a connection problem.

    Charging light behavior changes after storage

    After months in a drawer, the mouse may need a longer charging session before it wakes properly. Let it sit on the station, then test with the receiver connected directly to the computer. If it still refuses to respond, separate the problem into two parts: charging first, receiver detection second.

    Air Gestures, MenuCast, and Media Controls Need the Right Software Layer

    The MX Air was sold as more than a desk mouse. Its air movement, media navigation, and on-screen menu features depend on the software environment. Basic pointer support alone cannot reproduce every function, especially on systems newer than the original Windows XP and Windows Vista target era.

    Air pointer drifts or feels hard to control

    Hold the mouse naturally before judging the motion controls. If the pointer drifts in air, set the mouse down, wait a moment, then lift it again with a steadier grip. The air mode reads hand movement differently from the laser sensor on the desk, so fast wrist flicks can overshoot.

    Reduce pointer speed in the operating system if the air cursor jumps too far. A setting that feels fine on a desk can feel too sensitive when the mouse acts like a remote. Make small changes and test across a media player or browser rather than a tiny settings window.

    MenuCast does not appear

    MenuCast belongs to the older SetPoint feature set and works only with supported applications from that period. If the menu never appears, confirm that the matching Logitech MX Air Rechargeable Cordless Mouse Driver package and SetPoint controls are installed, then test in a supported media, photo, or browser application.

    Do not expect every modern app to respond to MenuCast. A current browser, streaming app, or photo viewer may ignore older on-screen command hooks. In that case, basic pointer movement can still work while the special menu feature remains unavailable.

    Media buttons control the wrong program

    Media keys can follow the application that owns playback focus. Close unused players, open the app you want to control, and test again. If commands still go to the wrong place, review SetPoint assignments and the app’s own shortcut behavior before reinstalling the mouse software.

    Some media controls behave differently when the program runs as an administrator or in a full-screen mode. Test in a normal window first. Once the command works there, return to full-screen playback and check whether the same control still responds.

    Gesture commands stop after a Windows update

    A system update can leave the receiver working while older SetPoint features lose their hook into Windows. Restart first, then open SetPoint and confirm that the MX Air profile still appears. If the profile is missing, remove the software, restart, reinstall the matching package, and reconnect the receiver after installation.

    The Logitech MX Air Rechargeable Cordless Mouse Driver cannot make every legacy feature behave like a modern app on every current system. If enhanced controls remain absent on a newer Windows version, keep the basic mouse functions and use app shortcuts for commands that SetPoint no longer passes cleanly.

    Desk Tracking, Clicks, and Wheel Behavior

    On a desk, the MX Air uses laser tracking. That gives it a different failure pattern from its air mode. A surface problem can affect normal cursor movement while gestures still seem alive, and a software problem can affect special controls while basic movement stays fine.

    Cursor skips on shiny furniture

    Move the mouse to a plain matte surface before changing drivers. Glossy tables, glass, mirrored finishes, and uneven fabric can confuse laser tracking. If the pointer improves on a mouse pad, the sensor and receiver are probably working, and the desk surface caused the fault.

    Clean the sensor window gently if movement feels scratchy or uneven. Dust around the lens can interrupt tracking when the mouse rests on a desk. Keep the charging base away from loose fabric and crumbs so debris does not move back onto the sensor area.

    Clicks work in air mode but not reliably on a desk

    Grip changes can make the MX Air feel different between desk and remote use. If clicks fail only in one position, test each button slowly while the mouse rests flat, then again while holding it. A physical button issue will usually repeat in both positions, while a grip issue changes with hand placement.

    Also check double-click speed in the operating system. A very fast double-click setting can make normal clicks seem missed, especially on an older mouse with worn switches. Adjust the setting before assuming SetPoint broke the click action.

    Scroll wheel responds in some windows only

    Scroll testing depends on the active window. Click inside the document, browser page, or media list before rolling the wheel. If scrolling works only after clicking inside the window, the mouse is sending wheel input, but the application does not accept it until it has focus.

    When wheel assignments have changed, open SetPoint and restore the default action for the wheel. A custom media command can make the wheel feel disabled in normal pages. Test vertical scrolling after restoring the default, then add custom behavior only if you still need it.

    Finish With a Setup That Matches This Unusual MX Air Design

    The MX Air works best when you treat it as three connected parts: a rechargeable device, a dedicated micro-receiver mouse, and a SetPoint-era air controller. Skipping any one of those parts creates misleading symptoms. A charged mouse with no receiver will not connect, and a detected receiver without SetPoint may miss the special controls.

    For a careful reset, charge the mouse first, plug the micro-receiver directly into the computer, restart, and install the Logitech MX Air Rechargeable Cordless Mouse Driver package that matches your system. Test ordinary desk movement before air gestures. Then check media controls and MenuCast only in applications that can respond to those older features.

    Keep newer Logitech receiver tools out of the repair path unless the support page for your exact device calls for them. The MX Air came from a different software generation, and its best results usually come from a stable receiver connection, a healthy charging station, and one SetPoint-based control setup.