DonRotolo
15-02-2005, 22:10
Since I have not yet found a decent schematic of the analog joysticks provided with the kit, here's what we came up with.
Details:
The potentiometers (variable resistors) in the joystick are the 90 degree rotation type (full resistance range in 90 degrees), but that's not required - it's just a function of the range of the joystick motion. ANY 100k potentiometer is fine.
The thumbwheel (not a wheel at all, but a very tiny joystick itself) is just another analog input (I think there's also a fourth one in the spec), but through clever selection of resistor values, more than one direction can be sensed at a time (i.e., two switches closed)
Of the four digital inputs, the "left thumb switch" is the one all the way on the left, sort of on the side of the stick - not immediately to the left of the thumbwheel.
The 15 pin male sub-D connector is generally not available at Radio Shack - they carry only the high-density version (often used for SVGA Video). Digi-Key, Mouser and others sell these.
Have fun,
Don
Details:
The potentiometers (variable resistors) in the joystick are the 90 degree rotation type (full resistance range in 90 degrees), but that's not required - it's just a function of the range of the joystick motion. ANY 100k potentiometer is fine.
The thumbwheel (not a wheel at all, but a very tiny joystick itself) is just another analog input (I think there's also a fourth one in the spec), but through clever selection of resistor values, more than one direction can be sensed at a time (i.e., two switches closed)
Of the four digital inputs, the "left thumb switch" is the one all the way on the left, sort of on the side of the stick - not immediately to the left of the thumbwheel.
The 15 pin male sub-D connector is generally not available at Radio Shack - they carry only the high-density version (often used for SVGA Video). Digi-Key, Mouser and others sell these.
Have fun,
Don