What’s up everyone. This is a really old topic but because the pages are no longer available I can’t really get good information. I have a 15th anniversary Street Fighter Nubytech stick. Since I’m planning to convert it to iL Eurostick and Happ Competition buttons, I was trying to find a converter that would work for it. Something that could convert from PS2 to PS3 or 4.
Mine is the one with the green PCB and 8v, I wonder if anyone is still around from way back then, however apparently there’s a specific converter that works for this one, if only I knew it looked like. Apparently there is one with two PS2 inputs, I see about 3 on eBay with two PS2 inputs so I guess I might have to just roll the dice and see…
I would appreciate any help.
. This is the old thread by the way:
If I can’t find a converter for it I’ll just have to put another PCB in it… thanks if anyone can help.
These sticks were available in three different voltages. The voltages are listed on the PCB. 3.5v , 7.5v, 8v. Which one you had affected which adapter you had to buy, however because the pictures are ancient there’s no way to know what people were using. Look at the white text on the side of the PCB right here, two blocks above DATA you’ll see 8v. That’s how you determine which one you have.I was hoping somebody from back then still remembered but it’s unlikely.
Except No console puts out 8 volts.
The Ps1 and Ps2 does 3.5 with 7.5 used for rumble, the Game Cube and OG Xbox does 5 volts from the controller port.
This one runs on 8 volts and it’s for the original consoles. The stick also has a memory card jack built into it. So I don’t doubt it needs extra voltage, even so the people that designed it wouldn’t have designed it for 8v if it didn’t need it. There’s three different pcbs that came in this stick and one of them is 8v, that’s mine.
Luckily they did put enough details on the other thread to say that their converter had double ports. I’ll probably put the Omni PCB or PS360+ in it if I have a problem. I could put a UFB in it but I’m not sure I need that much extra compatibility… I don’t know maybe, we’ll see I guess. If I do find which one works I’ll post it on here in case anyone else has this issue in the future…
That does not mean much, I seen 3rd party device manufacturers make some bizzare and laughable design choices before. Also keep in mind Nubytech went out of business shortly after making that stick.
Nothing on that board needs 8 volts.
Yeah, and that has Zero todo with it. Its a Microsoft Xbox Memory card slot, and the Microsoft controllers work on a modified USB 1.1 setup, they just have a custom plug and a extra wire carrying video sync for light guns.
No 8 volts.
8 Volts is not apart of any console’s controller specs.
None of “original consoles” puts out 8 volts from the controller port.
In this case you’re wrong because this one is 8 volts, that’s not something I made up its 8v, all your theories don’t change the reality. Did you engineer this stick?If not then you can’t say what is for what. If you’re going to speak as an authority you need some kind of evidence. The PCB is 8 volts period. You’re more concerned about that than the actual question I asked.
You assumed it wasn’t 8 volts, when you first asked you asked in an insulting manner like a made that figure up. Well no I didn’t you are the one that was wrong, not me.
Don’t act as an authority on how the older consoles were built unless you had a hand in building them. Older consoles always draw more power and are always larger than the newer consoles. That’s because the nanometer production process improves and chipsets get smaller. An original PS2 is not going to be the same size as a newer one and it’s not going to have the same power requirements.
This stick is designed to work with the Xbox and PS2, therefore your assumptions are wrong somewhere. If it didn’t need 8v it wouldn’t have it.
The stick is 8 volts period. Nubytech going out of business has nothing to do with that. It’s obvious they went out of business that’s why these things are hard to find and only getting more difficult to find. Exactly why I kept mine. They can easily cost damn near two hundred just to get one now. So yeah it’s obvious they went out of business.
Don’t bother giving your opinions in my future threads if you’re not actually helping.
Dude Nothing outputs 8 volts from the controller port, you can look up the specs.
Almost everything universally puts out 5 volts expect for the PlayStation line that does 3.5 volts.
Nothing else. 7.5 is used for PlayStation rumble that’s it.
The Engineers you want to put on a pedestal were morons who had no idea what they were doing.
And nether Console outputs 8 volts via the controller port.
I can get a new arcade stick that plentiful and not rare for $200 for the Xbox One and PS4.
None of that changes the fact that you are wrong. You didn’t think you were wrong and you are, so just accept it. “Almost nothing”, sure that sounds extremely reliable. You’re a bullshiter so just be quiet. Sure you can go buy any other plain Jane fightstick so go buy it, I have at least five others fight sticks myself. This one however is special and rare. And you won’t find it for less than close to 200, which is evidence of its rarity considering it’s an old generation stick.
You’re an asshole and you didn’t help at all, all are you here to argue about is a PCB that YOU WERE WRONG ABOUT from the very beginning. You didn’t engineer the stick, you don’t know anything about it so don’t pretend like you do. Whoever engineered it is far more competent than you are. You’re not an engineer, they are. So therefore they’re automatically more competent than you.
If I want to I’ll just block you and then your comments won’t show up in my threads. Go fuck yourself and pretend you know what you’re talkin about somewhere else.