The HRAP EX SE. At first I didn’t know wtf seimitsu buttons were until I saw that stick. It was then that I realized that I’ve played on seimitsu buttons before. I actually want this stick pretty bad after seeing it, but my issue is the button alignment. It appears to be the exact same as the Madcatz TE stick. That was my only (which is a big issue mind you) problem with that stick. I’m still kinda thinkin of just going with a Madcatz SE stick with some SANWA mods.
It would be hella sick, if I had a stick, with pictures of myself on it with some cool photoshop effects. I mean, who the hell would try to jack a stick with pictures of some dude posing and shit.
If I’m not mistaken, the TE is not a common-ground PCB - each button is grounded separately. I don’t know if that precludes dual-PCBing it, but it would certainly make it much more difficult.
Edit: Oops, nevermind, it appears the PCB is common ground after all, according to **this thread**, but I wonder why they wire each separately instead of daisy chaining it.
I could put a cthulu board in it if you buy everything neccessary and get it programmed and all that I suppose, I haven’t used one before but it shouldn’t be so hard.
sorry, i not to familiar with the terminology . I just want my 360 stick to be able to work on my ps3 with flipping a switch. I surely do not want two cords, so adding a switch would be required.
I don’t think that is possible with one cord, but you can research and tell me if the cthulu board is capable of this.
If it does any you have all the parts in hand get back at me, I don’t like spending too much time with technical requests because 99% of people on SRK I talk to about potentially doing stick work are just window shoppers. When you got the materials and money together, do get back to me. :tup:
Axells: I got mine for like 12 bucks at Fry’s. You need resistors for the triggers to be set at neutral when you destroy the potentiometer for them, I believe 6-10k works, and you use the top two prongs for resistors, and the bottom one is your wire to button.