The ROCCAT Kone XP Air is equipped with the PixArt PAW3370 sensor. According to specifications, the 3370 is capable of up to 19,000 CPI, as well as a maximum tracking speed of 400 IPS, which equals 10.16 m/s. Out of the box, five pre-defined CPI steps are available: 400, 800, 1200, 1600, and 3200.
All testing was done on the latest firmware (0.42/1.07). As such, results obtained on earlier firmware versions may differ from those presented hereafter.
CPI Accuracy
"CPI" (short for counts per inch) describes the number of counts registered by the mouse if it is moved exactly an inch. There are several factors (firmware, mounting height of the sensor not meeting specifications, mouse feet thickness, mousing surface, among others) which may contribute to nominal CPI not matching actual CPI. It is impossible to always achieve a perfect match, but ideally, nominal and actual CPI should differ as little as possible. In this test, I'm determining whether this is the case or not. However, please keep in mind that said variance will still differ from unit to unit, so your mileage may vary.
I've restricted my testing to the four most common CPI steps, which are 400, 800, 1600, and 3200. As you can see, deviation is exclusively positive, highly consistent, and very high, which is a poor result overall. In order to account for the measured deviation, adjusted steps of 400, 750, 1450, and 2900 CPI have been used for testing.
Motion Delay
"Motion delay" encompasses all kinds of sensor lag. Any further sources of input delay will not be recorded in this test. The main thing I'll be looking for in this test is sensor smoothing, which describes an averaging of motion data across several capture frames in order to reduce jitter at higher CPI values, increasing motion delay along with it. The goal here is to have as little smoothing as possible. As there is no way to accurately measure motion delay absolutely without special equipment, it is done by comparison with a control subject that has been determined to have consistent and low motion delay. In this case, the control subject is a Logitech G403, whose PMW3366 sensor has no visible smoothing across the entire CPI range. Note that the Kone XP Air is moved first and thus receives a slight head start.
Wired Testing
First, I'm looking at two xCounts plots—generated at 1600 and 19,000 CPI—to quickly gauge whether there is any smoothing, which would be indicated by any visible "kinks." Tracking is poor to where identifying any kinks becomes impossible, so we'll have to tend to xSum testing to determine smoothing.
In order to determine motion delay, I'm looking at xSum plots generated at 1600 and 19,000 CPI. The line further to the left denotes the sensor with less motion delay. Neither 1600 nor 19,000 CPI show any motion delay differential, indicating there not being any smoothing across the entire CPI range.
Wireless Testing
Tracking continues to be just as bad as in wired mode, if not worse.
Once again, 1600 and 19,000 CPI are tested. At 1600 CPI, a motion delay differential of roughly 3 ms can be measured, which continues to be the case at 19,000 CPI. Since polling isn't stable, motion delay varies slightly, too.
What people typically mean when they talk about "acceleration" is speed-related accuracy variance (or short SRAV). It's not about the mouse having a set amount of inherent positive or negative acceleration, but about the cursor not traveling the same distance if the mouse is moved the same physical distance at different speeds. The easiest way to test this is by comparison with a control subject that is known to have very low SRAV, which in this case is the G403. As you can see from the plot, no displacement between the two cursor paths can be observed, which confirms that SRAV is very low.
Perfect Control Speed
Perfect Control Speed (or PCS for short) is the maximum speed up to which the mouse and its sensor can be moved without the sensor malfunctioning in any way. I've only managed to hit a measly 5 m/s, which is within the proclaimed PCS range and causes no observable sensor malfunction.
Polling Rate Stability
Considering the Kone XP Air Air is usable as a wired mouse as well, I'll be testing polling rate stability for both wired and wireless use.
Wired Testing
With RGB lighting enabled, all of the available polling rates (125, 250, 500, and 1000 Hz) show severe instability.
Things improve with RGB lighting disabled, with both 500 Hz and 1000 Hz becoming stable as a result.
Wireless Testing
For wired mice, polling rate stability merely concerns the wired connection between the mouse (SPI communication) and USB. For wireless mice, another device that needs to be kept in sync between the first two is added to the mix: the wireless dongle/receiver. I'm unable to measure all stages of the entire end-to-end signal chain individually, so testing polling-rate stability at the endpoint (the USB) has to suffice here.
First, I'm testing whether SPI, wireless, and USB communication are synchronized. Any of these being out of sync would be indicated by at least one 2 ms report, which would be the result of any desynchronization drift accumulated over time. Polling is unstable to where one has to assume some sort of desynchronization drift is present.
Second, I'm testing the general polling-rate stability of the individual polling rates in wireless mode. Running the Kone XP Air at a lower polling rate can have the benefit of extending battery life. All polling rates display major instability.
While disabling RGB lighting yet again improves things, stable polling is still nowhere to be seen.
Paint Test
This test is used to indicate any potential issues with angle snapping (non-native straightening of linear motion) and jitter, along with any sensor lens rattle. As you can see, no issues with angle snapping can be observed. No jitter is visible at 1600 CPI. 5000 CPI shows minor jitter, which is amplified to moderate levels at 10,000 CPI despite the latter step having smoothing. 19,000 CPI then displays major jitter. Lastly, there is no lens movement.
Lift-off Distance
The Kone XP Air offers offers two pre-defined LOD levels to choose from, along with the ability to perform a manual calibration. Using the "very low" preset, the sensor does not track at a height of 1 DVD (<1.2 mm). This does not change when using the "low" preset. Keep in mind that LOD may vary slightly depending on the mousing surface (pad) it is being used on.
Click Latency
In most computer mice, debouncing is required to avoid double clicks, slam-clicks, or other unintended effects of switch bouncing. Debouncing typically adds a delay, which, along with any potential processing delay, shall be referred to as click latency. In order to measure click latency, the mouse has been interfaced with an NVIDIA LDAT (Latency Display Analysis Tool). Many thanks go to NVIDIA for providing an LDAT device. More specifically, the LDAT measures the time between the electrical activation of the left main button and the OS receiving the button-down message. Unless noted otherwise, the values presented in the graph refer to the lowest click latency possible on the mouse in question. If a comparison mouse is capable of both wired and wireless operation, only the result for wireless (2.4 GHz) operation will be listed.
In wired mode, click latency has been measured to be roughly 1.1 ms, with standard deviation being 0.37 ms. In wireless mode, click latency has been measured to be roughly 3.6 ms, with standard deviation being 0.32 ms. The latency difference between wired and wireless is 2.5 ms. The debounce time setting has no effect on click latency on press (button-down).