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Partially fixed input lag and floaty mouse | UPDATE

Posted: 27 Nov 2025, 04:36
by Roxtar
Quick update on my input lag / “dirty electricity” issue, in case it helps someone in the same situation.

In my first thread I talked about how buying a new PSU seemed to fix my input lag and “floaty” mouse feeling. For a few days it felt amazing: Valorant was crisp, flicks felt natural, and even moving the mouse on the Windows desktop looked super sharp.

But after turning the PC on and off over the next week, the bad feeling slowly came back. Each day it felt a bit worse, almost like the PSU was struggling more and more. My (non-expert) theory is that the PSU capacitors were gradually getting “contaminated” by dirty power from the wall again.

After about a week I was honestly crushed. I went back to lurking forums and watching videos until I found a post where someone mentioned that a double-conversion UPS fixed their issue. Not just any UPS, but specifically double-conversion, because those units convert AC → DC → AC, effectively filtering out most of the dirty electricity before it reaches your PC.

By the end of summer I’d started a programmer job, and the first thing I wanted to do with my first paycheck was buy one of these UPS units. I waited a bit to read more about it, and in November I finally ordered a double-conversion UPS (Salicru SLC Twin PRO 2 700VA Schuko SAI).

I set up my power chain like this:

Wall outlet → UPS → PC + both monitors

On the UPS I enabled LINE mode so it always delivers filtered power to the outputs. Then I booted up the PC and launched Valorant.

Results:
  • It didn’t feel 100% perfect, but it was much better.
  • Mouse control improved a lot, and aiming for the head felt more consistent.
  • The “60 Hz-ish” feeling was still there on the monitor, but overall I’d say the UPS removed about 60–70% of the issue.
I waited until the end of the month to see if the problem would slowly creep back like it did with just the new PSU. So far, it hasn’t.

Right now I’ve ordered a replacement PSU, because I suspect the remaining ~30% of the problem might be due to components that have already been degraded by years of dirty power. I’m also planning to buy a medical-grade isolation transformer to go even further with power conditioning.

I’ll keep updating this thread with any new results. Hopefully this helps someone else struggling with the same weird input lag / dirty power nightmare.


UPDATE 04-12-2025

The PSU replacement arrived, and I also ordered a new CPU (9800X3D) plus a new UPS with enough power (Salicru SLC Twin PRO 2 2000VA Schuko SAI).

At first, it felt horrible, just like when I didn’t have any UPS connected. Then I remembered that in the UPS manual it says the PC must be at least 20 cm away from the unit. With the old 700 VA UPS this wasn’t an issue because it was quite small, but the new one is gigantic, so I guess there’s more interference.

I moved the PC as far away as the power cable allowed and I have to say: the feeling is incredibly amazing now. Zero input lag, the mouse feels like an extension of my arm, I know exactly how much I need to move it to land headshots, and the monitor looks like real life at 1000 Hz.

I’ll keep updating weekly… if I don’t forget. :P

Re: Partially fixed input lag and floaty mouse

Posted: 27 Nov 2025, 04:46
by Roxtar
Replying to post my latests match HS% accuracy (I haven't played this week cause I'm waiting for the PSU to arrive)


Image

Re: Partially fixed input lag and floaty mouse

Posted: 27 Nov 2025, 11:08
Since yesterday 26.11.2025 i am doing the same test. I have the Riello Sentinel PRO SEP 3000VA.
Also with the VFI-SS-11 (EN-62040-3) specification. This specification is very important. PC, PSU and router are plugged in PSU and covered with faraday fabric (I gone crazy :roll: ). I made about 6 games that felt very good but against cheater who diminished the fun.
The time will tell if it really works.
https://www.riello-ups.com/de/products/ ... ntinel-pro

I have to say, you need at least 1500VA. 700VA are to weak for a gaming PC + two Monitors and don´t forget to operate the PSU in online mode. My PSU is very loud in online mode. Yours too?

I think at your PSU the online mode is called -CUF- . Please test it. Is your PSU in -CUF- getting loud too?
https://www.salicru.com/de-de/slc-700-twin-pro2.html
https://d7rh5s3nxmpy4.cloudfront.net/CM ... L07901.pdf

7.2.6. Converter mode -CUF-.
The UPS operating code on Converter mode is «CUF». On this oper-
ating mode, the UPS works as a frequency converter (50 Hz or 60 Hz).
When mains is wrong or in case of blackout, the UPS will shift to
battery mode and the load will be supplied from batteries, till the
normal conditions of mains are restored.
The Converter mode can be activated by means of the setting screen
in the LCD panel, or software (WinPower, ...).
It has to be considered that on this operating mode, the power rate
of the equipment is derated up to 60 % of the nominal

Re: Partially fixed input lag and floaty mouse

Posted: 27 Nov 2025, 16:48
by Roxtar
Yes I use the online mode and it is loud.

Under load the PC is only consuming around 500va so the UPS still has some room to operate.

Why is the specification important?

Re: Partially fixed input lag and floaty mouse

Posted: 27 Nov 2025, 19:19
by Slender
ups cant fix air

Re: Partially fixed input lag and floaty mouse

Posted: 28 Nov 2025, 02:14
by Roxtar
Slender wrote:
27 Nov 2025, 19:19
ups cant fix air
Air? We are talking about filtering dirty electricity

Re: Partially fixed input lag and floaty mouse

Posted: 28 Nov 2025, 02:37
Slender wrote:
27 Nov 2025, 19:19
ups cant fix air
Thats why i have covered everything with faraday fabric. I had covered my PC and router before I had a PSU but im not sure, if it made for me any difference...
This is the ultimate test, is the input lag/desync problem electricity relaited or not.

The filtering in a VFI-SS-111 refers to the operation of an online double-conversion UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply) system classified according to the DIN-EN 62040-3 standard. This means it offers the highest level of protection through double voltage conversion (AC to DC and back). The output voltage and frequency are completely isolated from the input, resulting in a constant and clean output current free of interference.

Re: Partially fixed input lag and floaty mouse

Posted: 28 Nov 2025, 03:00
Roxtar wrote:
28 Nov 2025, 02:14
Slender wrote:
27 Nov 2025, 19:19
ups cant fix air
Air? We are talking about filtering dirty electricity
That what he means:
Harmonic interference transmitted over the air is caused by high switching frequencies and wide frequency spectra, which propagate like radio waves and are particularly relevant in building technology.

They are caused by nonlinear loads such as frequency converters and can interfere with sensitive devices such as computers or lead to hardware failures and system crashes.

Disruptions to IT and communication systems: Massive disruptions such as operational failures, system crashes, data problems and screen flickering can occur.

Re: Partially fixed input lag and floaty mouse

Posted: 28 Nov 2025, 03:03
by Roxtar
[email protected] wrote:
28 Nov 2025, 03:00
Roxtar wrote:
28 Nov 2025, 02:14
Slender wrote:
27 Nov 2025, 19:19
ups cant fix air
Air? We are talking about filtering dirty electricity
That what he means:
Harmonic interference transmitted over the air is caused by high switching frequencies and wide frequency spectra, which propagate like radio waves and are particularly relevant in building technology.

They are caused by nonlinear loads such as frequency converters and can interfere with sensitive devices such as computers or lead to hardware failures and system crashes.

Disruptions to IT and communication systems: Massive disruptions such as operational failures, system crashes, data problems and screen flickering can occur.
I see, anyways I think that's too much schizo, I try to focus on plausible things that can be proved/fixed, if we start searching for interference in the air we would never fix the issue.

Re: Partially fixed input lag and floaty mouse

Posted: 28 Nov 2025, 03:15
Roxtar wrote:
28 Nov 2025, 03:03
I see, anyways I think that's too much schizo, I try to focus on plausible things that can be proved/fixed, if we start searching for interference in the air we would never fix the issue.
Interference in the air is easy and cheap to fix with faraday fabric.