That kit uses the Pac Drive and Ultralux buttons. I wouldnt recommend the Pac Drive and I havent heard the best things about the Ultralux buttons. (Review [
Here])
my question what do i need to order?
(Ignore the LED controller section and anything about RGBs if you only plan on having your buttons lit permanently.)
LED controller(s) - either [
PacDrive] or [
LED Wiz]. I would go for the LED Wiz as you can vary the intensity of the LEDs for fade etc effects. The PacDrive simply has on/off outputs. If you want to light the buttons with a single colour LED you would need one LED Wiz, If you wanted to go RGB on 'all' the buttons (eight per player + start and pinball buttons) you would need two LED Wiz's as each RGB uses three ports of the 32 available ports.
LEDs - Either single colour or RGB. GGG stocks good quality [
single colour and RGB LEDs] You can get them cheaper elsewhere (ebay etc) but the quality may not be as good as Randys. A word of warning, if you source your own RGB LEDs make sure you buy the common anode version as the common cathode version will not work with the LED Wiz. If you are using RGBs GGG stocks the [
RGB-Drive] boards. They are available in a few versions but the top spec one includes a mounted RGB pre wired with resistors and a two foot 4-core cable that you can simply hook up to your controller. They are a good idea if you are not to keen on lots of soldering.
Buttons - Most buttons can be lit in some way but most people seem to use either [
GGG's Electric Ice], [
GGG's NovaGem] or the [
'Happ' style translucent]. All of these buttons will fit your X-Arcade.
Other bits - If you are soldering up LEDs etc your self you will need a soldering iron etc, solder, wire, heatshrink, your LEDs and appropriate resistors + a load more stuff I'm probably forgetting.
do the led buttons fit in the x-arcade?
Answered above.
how can i power them?
If you are just lighting LEDs to be switched on all of the time then I would just run a 5/12v cable from your PC into the X-Arcade. You can buy a molex splitter cable and tap into that to save butchering your PC wiring if you want to avoid that.
The LED Wiz can light 5v LEDs using the power from its USB connection. However it has a limit. You need to work out how much current your LEDs are likely to draw if they were all on full intensity. USB has ~500mA available but I wouldn't draw over 400mA personally. If you do need to draw more than 400mA (which is often the case) you would need to send a 5v feed to the LED Wiz to increase the available current. You can do this the same way I described above.
Note:This is presuming you are using 5v LEDs, if you are using anything higher then you will need to supply the LED Wiz with the appropriate power and possibly use the bank select feature if working with more than one voltage.
also do i need the led-wiz?
It should be answered above but if you want to use lighting effects and get your buttons to light up when playing games then yes you do.
Hope that is of some help
