ehsia.com – my stuff and reviews

08 Feb

Upgrade Hori Wii Fighting Stick to arcade quality partsPC

I changed the artwork on my Hori stick and also upgraded the buttons to arcade Sanwa ones.  Here are some pictures of the mod.

I took the time to use quick connect terminals so I can change button layouts or upgrade easier in the future.  The PCB comes from a PS1 Dual Shock and requires no soldering at all.  Holes had to have the tabs removed and widened with dremel to allow the Sanwa’s to fit properly.

Artwork was printed on Epson R380 inkjet, laminated and then used double sided tape.

With the proper adapter, this baby will work any console.  XBOX/PS1/PS2/PS3/Gamecube/PC/etc.

hori-fighting-stick-wii-arcade28 hori-fighting-stick-wii-arcade27

hori-wii01

26 Jan

Making a Universal Arcade Stick

This HOWTO will show how to convert an arcade stick that works for only one console to work with multiple systems.  You can also take this opportunity to buy some quality arcade buttons to replace the stock ones.

Material:

Hori Wii Fighting Stick $50
Playstation 1 Dual Shock (Early A revision) $8
PS1 to XBOX converter $10
PS1 to gamecube converter $10
PS1 to PS3 converter $20
20-22AWG wiring

Tools:

Soldering iron
Solder pump
screw drivers

Why an arcade stick?
I have an XBOX, Wii and PS3.  My favourite console is the original XBOX.  Once softmodded it is one heck of a machine.  I can play hundreds of arcade games from the past on MAME-oX, FBA-XXX, and many others consoles like NES, SNES, Genesis.  There are tons of native fighting games for it too.

I consider myself an old school gamer.  I find myself playing more of the older games then the new ones.  My first video game machine was an Atari 2600 and I grew up sticking coins into arcade machines.  A gamepad just doesn’t do these games justice.

Why take a perfectly good fighting stick and shove an ancient PS1 gamepad inside it?

It’s really hard to find an arcade stick that works with more than one console these days.  I wanted to have only 1  stick to work on all my systems because of space. The PS1 Dual Shock is one of the most popular gamepads ever made.  It’s easy to find and is well documented.  The PS1 Dual Shock is also one of the simpliest and has a lot of buttons.

There are lots of converters for the PS1 controllers to work with other systems like the PS3, 360, Gamecube, and XBOX.  It’ll probably be compatible with future systems too granted someone makes converters for them.

Why not make your own from scratch?
An arcade stick is in a sense just a box with switches.  Very simple.  However,  I’m not very crafty with wood since I don’t have the tools.  I decided to just gut out a premade one from Hori since I had one lying around not used.

Why not use an X-Arcade works, it works with all systems too.
Those are just too big for my tastes.  I need it compact.  Also it costs a lot if you factor in all the converters for your systems.

You can use any current generation arcade stick and convert it to a PS1 compatible one.  I chose to use my little utilized Hori Wii Fighting stick.

Let’s start.

I decided to go with a Hori Wii Fighting stick because that’s what I had at the moment.

hori-wii01 hori-wii02

The first thing is to find a PS1 controller and dismantle it except for the PCB and wiring.  There are many revisions of the PS1 Dual Shock.  The one I’m using is SCPH-1200 A (early revision).  There’s H, M, etc.  The best one to get are revision A (later) and M.  Those actually require solderless connection points to the PCB.  But if you can’t find those, an early A revision is easy to solder.

Check out slagcoin’s site for the PCB diagram for this controller (SCPH-1200 A)

hori-wii05

Next we open up the Hori stick and desolder its PCB from the buttons and chuck it in the trash. hori-wii03

hori-wii041

Wire up the ground wires.  I use black wires and daisy chain the ground wires to go to one common ground on the PS1′s PCB.hori-wii07

The black wires goes to the common ground connection.hori-wii08

Now all the signal wires connected to the PCB.hori-wii09

To strengthen the connections, I use hot glue.

hori-wii101

The completed stick with a TAC PS1 to PS3 converter.  This stick will now work with other consoles with converters

tackps1-ps3hori-wii111

My next step would be to paint it, and put in arcade quality buttons from Sanwa.  I’ve ordered them and should be putting them in soon.

14 Jan

Griffin Clarifi iPhone Case

griffinclarifi

This case is my favourite case for the iPhone 3G.  As a case it does it’s job of protecting the phone. It’s a very decent case, but I’m not going to focus on that (pardon the pun).

It’s got one very useful feature, a macro lens.  This lens lets you slide it on/off the iPhone camera eye. In my line of work I find myself snapping pics of error messages, UPC codes, serial numbers on top of hardware or small text on a piece of paper.  I don’t always carry a camera with me but I do have my iPhone with me all the time.  Without the macro lens, whenever I take a pic up close, it comes out blurry.  Not anymore.

Here are some side-by-side pics I took with and without the macro lens. It’s very obvious which is which.

clarifi-tagaclarifi-tagb

clarifi-tagaclarifi-tagb

clarifi-tagaclarifi-tagb

clarifi-tagaclarifi-tagb

clarifi-tagaclarifi-tagb

As you can see, it’s night and day when it comes to how much clearer the images are with a macro lens.  When you need to take a close-up pic, the iPhone can’t focus it properly to give you a sharp image.  With the Griffin Clarifi case, I can take some really nice pics.


It works fantastic with the Evernote app.  Take a picture of a business card, and Evernote will OCR the text for easy searching.  A must buy!

© 2012 ehsia.com – my stuff and reviews | Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS)

Your Index Web Directorywordpress logo