Mephikun wrote:Thanks for the suggestion. Yeah, that'd probably be cheaper. my budget is $70 right now, $235 soon. I'm a minor w/o a job so this is going to be difficult. Don't have a drill, my dad might have a broken one somewhere, but I think he chucked it. Could I possibly just get a wired GS 360 controller and just solder the sanwa buttons on?
Thanks,
Mephikun
$235 is a sizable budget. Is this for the whole modifying project or just the sticks? My sticks are coming in about $100-150 a piece. That accounts for wood, plastic sheets, MDF, paewong ps3/360 PCBs, crimping quick connects, artwork done by my friend, buttons and joysticks.
I'm guessing by GS you mean Game Stop? I would definitely go wired just because some people complain of wireless latency (I've never experienced it, but that may be because I suck at fighting games

). The problem I foresee here is that you still have to mount the arcade buttons. You can't mount arcade buttons into a standard controller. 3 or 4 buttons would be bigger than the whole controller itself.
You would need to check this site for wiring diagrams. I'm pretty sure the GameStop controllers are
Common Ground, which is what you want for less wiring and headaches especially if you're a beginner.
http://www.slagcoin.com/joystick/pcb_wi ... B_DIAGRAMS
**Edit**
I also forgot, if you plan on wiring up the TRIGGER buttons from a 360 controller(only if you've pad hacked it), you need to implement a simple resistor mod when hooking it up to the arcade button. There are tutorials on youtube. On my first stick I chose to not connect those buttons because I was still very new to wiring and soldering. I just made a 6 button stick a la Street Fighter layout
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Are you mounting the sticks into that panel in the front that looks like it can fold down, or are you making separate sticks like the one I made?
Try making a pricing sheet with what you want. Here are some reputable sites with arcade components.
http://www.focusattack.com/
http://www.lizardlick.com/
http://etokki.com/
http://www.paradisearcadeshop.com/
Things can start to add up, especially with an ambitious project like this. If I lived in Maine near you i'd let you borrow my tools.
