Making an arcade stick Tutorial PART 9
Uploader Comments (DSEemployee)
All Comments (43)
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@Huizar Hey did you ever figure out the ground? I'm currently working on this right now. I'm assuming that you connect it to the common ground and then daisy chain it to each button? Also what's the deal with the triggers and the normally open/normally closed switch? I still have no idea how to do that bit.
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I have a problem. I have everything wired properly and I used 470ohm resisters like you stated in another of your videos. I'm getting phantom directional presses and an error keeps popping up about shutting down the Xbox. Did I fry my resistors, or is there something else I'm missing? Thanks.
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was the tutorial ever completed?
i love the videos, you really seem to know what your talking about but wheres the end?
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Where did you solder the wires from the dpad to?
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tht switch at 1:08 are those the same ones they sell at radio shack
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he nice tutorials were part 10
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Do you need the triggers.
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im lost on how to do the triggers
do you have or know of any way to do this with a ps2 remote
Stillvip187 3 months ago
@Stillvip187 Should be the same concept Stillvip187. Even easier I suspect
DSEemployee 1 month ago in playlist Uploaded videos
i was wondering if your making a stick, do you have to desolder the triggers? or can i just solder on to the the solder where the triggers are?
rvaliao 2 years ago
um... dont do that cos the if you out a resister across the two points it may work in parallel and i'm not sure what might happen
DSEemployee 2 years ago
This may be a stupid question, but does a standard arcade button (Sanwa/Seimitsu) function as the "normally closed switch" you mention as a requirement for the triggers to function properly?? Common-sense, to me, says that it is (button unpressed is closed, pressed opens the switch), but I just want to be clear... Thanks for the great tutorials, btw!!
Zigzug69 2 years ago
normally open is like a gate that is open. thats what most switches are by default. normally closed is like a closed gate, allowing current to follow.
DSEemployee 2 years ago