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| dave 1945:
OK this has probably be asked by allot of newbies but i feel in love p360s along time ago, at the mo im making a control panel. I what it to last me a long time and have the best controls as I'll be taking it to school for our LAN party's (and play some retro games) i now where to get the 5 volts from (I'm using an ipac) but first i need to know where ground it to and second will the ipac take the strain (i will most probably use the usb type) Thanks for listening to me ramble :D |
| dave 1945:
is this what it would look like swithch gnd and volts around |
| NoOne=NBA=:
Since nobody else is answering this, I'd suggest you contact Andy at Ultimarc. He'd be the one to know for sure how much power the I-pac can supply. If I were doing the project myself, I'd play it safe, and pull the power directly from the computer's power supply. You could build a nice disconnect in one of your PCI covers that would allow you to unhook the power cable without getting inside the computer case. |
| paigeoliver:
I have two of those suckers hooked up to a the +5 on a keywhiz and it is fine. It isn't the ENCODER providing the +5 anyway, the +5 on the encoder is just a direct line to the +5 from the keyboard port. |
| rdagger:
I'm running 3 P360's, 3 volcano buttons and a rotary interface off of a single IPAC with no problems. However, my USB IPAC is plugged into a self-powered hub that can easily support 7 devices drawing the maximum allowed amount of power defined by USB specification. I wouldn't worry about the IPAC. I'd be more concerned about damaging the motherboard if you hook up too many items on a single port. Also the P360 pins are high at rest and go to ground when the stick is moved. Therefore, if you use a different power source you need to make sure that it shares a common ground with the encoder and that the voltage is matched. |
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