Hey all-
Long time lurker here finishing up fabrication for a rotating control panel.
I'm interested in incorporating 2 DC controllers as one of my panels. I understand analog console controls are not tried and true, and am fully prepared to go digital, but the wifey would love some Sonic Adventure if at all possible. The following excerpt from the FAQ page caught my eye and I was wondering if anyone has attempted it or not.
Dreamcast
The Dreamcast controller contains an analog thumbstick and analog shoulder (trigger) buttons. On the original Sega pad, all analog controls are measured using Hall Effect Sensors. Another detailed explanation of the Sega pad with hall effect thumbstick and trigger buttons is located here. Since these hall effect ic's basically regulate a voltage between +5 (or 2.5v) and ground, its quite simple to hack them to digital controls. All you do is ground out the one pin of the Hall chip. DC-to-Jamma has a pic describing which points to hack for the trigger buttons [the same could be done for the thumbstick]. 3rd party manufacturers which make Dreamcast pads usually opt for the cheaper potentiometer approach to measuring analog input. [I don't recommend hacking potentiometers to digital controls unless you understand how they are used in the circuit. Most implementations use a centered voltage of +2.5v with +5v being the extreme to one side, and ground being the extreme to the other. Its still possible to wire a digital joystick to theses potentiometers, but you have to use a +2.5v source on at least two of the microswitches of the digital joystick (rather than ground). Hope that makes sense.]
I have original DC controllers and am curious to know whether anyone has tried to implement this, and even if they haven't whether they think it is feasible of not. BTW, true analog is not important to me, the only thing important is making the controller with w/ analog only games.