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An easy/cheap way to have an arcade joystick?
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ZProtoss:

     Ok next question. How much will a 1 player arcade controller run me if I go the ipac/keywiz route. Taking in case cost, pcb board cost, and 8 push buttons/stick. Basically if anyone who's done this before can make me a simple list of what to get and a ballpark cost that'd be fantastic :)
AlanS17:
The largest cost is in tools - not materials. You'll need a jigsaw, a drill, and depending on how nice you want this thing to be - a router or dremel.

You add together and it'll come out to over $100.
CthulhuLuke:
$5 Sidewinder - http://shop.store.yahoo.com/surpluscomputers/micsidjoy.html      Extremely easy to hack, the pcb has predrilled test holes for the buttons, and the joysticks have big contact points to solder to.
$9.50 Happ Super Joysticks Black
http://www.therealbobroberts.com/     The best joysticks in my opinion because they have a very smooth circular feel, and they're very responsive.  Bad 4-way conversion though, but you can get restrictor plates if you want that.
$11.60 Happs horizontal pushbuttons x 8
http://www.therealbobroberts.com/     The best feeling pushbuttons in my opinion, you got 6 for the basic 2x3 layout, and the 2 others for start and select, or coin and 1p start.
$20  wires, solder, female quick disconnects, terminal strips,  all stuff you can pick up at radioshack and any automobile store like Shucks.
$30   for the wood, semi-gloss polyurethane, paint, screws, wood glue, assuming you already have all the tools needed.  You can pick that up at any hardware store, very easy to find stuff, and its a good idea if you're making a single joystick control panel to make the wood on the top thinner than the rest, or get a router so you can make the joystick higher to the top, so the shaft is nice and long *no pun intended.*  If you want the wood to be nice and shiny and scratch resistant, it takes about a month of coating the surface first with primer, then with black paint, sand it, spray again, sand again, repeat bout 4 times, then do the same with polyurethane till its a shiny coat.
   And always overcompensate what you think its gonna cost, so I'd say you're gonna have a grand total of $80 for a home made joystick, you could easily go under this if you found cheap wood, went with contact paper, got a good deal on wiring equipment or had it already, etc.  If you're only making a single control panel, I wouldn't suggest a full blown I-pac or Keywiz, because they are intended for a 2 player control panel, and all those empty slots to me seems like a waste of money.
      -Good Luck
armad1ll0:
Hmmm you may also forget shipping for so many individual parts.

I've sold joysticks to people for as little as $70 to an average of about $90~

I start with the Redoctane case which is a $30 joystick with bad parts. I swap in Happ arcade parts that drop right in... bobroberts is the same.

I then swap the PCB board and am good to go.

I think that this is the cheapest/easiest you can find. One conversion normally takes no more than an hour or two.

Many may criticize (snaaa..) this cheap way to get people into joysticks but it beats my $150-200 scratch built ones that are really nice!
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