Hmm, interesting idea. Presumably it's a modified Suzo series 500.
Would you be offering conversion kits for people who already own Suzo 500 sticks? The saving would be presumably be small but this might be a way to keep shipping costs down.
Heavily modified would be more apt. A kit would consist of about 27 pieces of hardware requiring much documentation, removal of some existing parts and is on par with assembling a BBQ grill in difficulty. For now, that won't an option because simplicity is what this one is all about.
I can however see a potential problem. I think the Suzo 500 joysticks work best and look better when they are sunk into the control panel so that the ball top is at a similar height to the old Wico sticks. However if you mount the Prodigy joystick in this way then the lever for switching between 4 and 8 way mode is going to get buried. I am of course assuming that the pictures on your website are an accurate representation of the final product.
I also agree with the comments about the handle. It's purely a question of aesthetics. The Suzo handles are actually very comfortable but because the shaft is tapered it's not easy to fit a dust washer so you end up with an exposed hole in your panel.
Most of this is an aesthetic thing. Your hand doesn't really know how much of the stick is buried, unless you hold it at the base. I'm guessing most don't do this (I don't).
Part of the beauty of this system is the integrated mounting plate that actually, for the first time, allows these sticks to be mounted as they were designed to be mounted. Anyone wanting to mount this type of stick under their panel with a hacked dustcover floating at the surface will want to use the BASIC version and come up with their own solution.
I have to mention this again (sorry

). The only
real arcade machines with dust covers floating on top of the panel are ones owned by lazy operators who did a quick and dirty conversion or control replacement. We've just seen the dust cover used incorrectly so many times that we think something is wrong when it's not floating around on top. You aren't
supposed to see that thing at all! When used correctly, it looks clean like the picture above.
RE: Stick Shape
These sticks have a very clever design that most people, for some reason, fail to pick up on. It's a hybrid! Look at it carefully. If you cover the ball top, the bottom part indicates "bat handle". Cover the lower end, and it's a "ball-top". What this does is offer followers of either style a design they can be comfortable with. A thick, tapered shaft for the bat crowd and ball for the retro crowd. And the interesting part is that it actually succeeds, but is misunderstood because it looks different.

RandyT