- 精华
- 0
- 帖子
- 47
- 威望
- 0 点
- 积分
- 47 点
- 种子
- 5 点
- 注册时间
- 2005-7-22
- 最后登录
- 2017-6-4
|
发表于 2009-8-9 22:46 · 美国
|
显示全部楼层
要DIY摇杆推荐个网站给你:http://slagcoin.com/joystick.html (要***上)绝对专业的摇杆DIY网站
下面是这个网站关于TE的资料
Madcatz
Madcatz recently decided to get involved in the arcade controller market, and, at the moment, many people at the company were surprised by the demand (though many people more familiar with joysticks were not) and their SFIV controllers are at a shortage. But Madcatz has decided and announced they are going to keep producing these controllers to meet demand.
Markman was at the center of the design of the Madcatz joysticks and they do have a great deal of quality because of this. *** Edition controller is smaller and uses knockoffs of Sanwa parts, while the Tournament Edition is larger and uses all Sanwa joysticks and buttons.
Arcade FightStick Tournament Edition
* Vewlix-style 8-button layout
* Sanwa JLF w/ standard mounting plate and PCB with wire harness connection; contains welded bracket also compatible with Seimitsu LS-32 S-plate; joystick height about 22.5mm
* Sanwa OBSF-30 buttons, 6 white, 2 black/grey
* Sanwa OBSF-24 buttons, 2 white, mounted on the right part on the back side of the box
* Chamfered rectangular box made with 1.5mm-4mm thick light plastic measuring 16" x 10 " x 2.5" (400mm x 250mm x 64mm), with 1/4" screwed on rubber feet (making it 2-3/4" high), having a plastic sheet go through the middle for reinforcement and installation of the PCB and wiring
* Top panel made of 1.5mm thick 12-5/8" x 7-2/3" (320mm x 195mm) tempered steel with rounded corners, covered with a 1mm thick plastic decorated sticker; the panel installs in a plastic roundovered rim that is highest where it meets the panel (it does not interfere) so that the panel installs flush in the box
* 0 degree slope (it looks like it slopes, but it does not); you can make it slope by elevating the rear feet on a board or something similar
* Bottom panel made of 1.2mm thick 13-9/16" x 8-9/16" (345mm x 217mm) tempered steel with rounded front corners
* Wired with 22 gauge stranded wire, .110" crimped double-barrel quick disconnects with heat-shrink tubing covers, .110" terminal strip, wire harnesses, into small PCBs
* Individually assigned turbo, analog stick command (makes the joystick work off d-pad, left analog, or right analog), tournament lock (disables turbo and option buttons), and home buttons, and a headphone jack
* 160" (4m) cord with a storage compartment
* Warranty sticker on one of the bottom panel screws; opening the controller voids the warranty.
The design has many similarities to Hori and therefore some of the things I dislike as well. I feel it does not have enough space for the placement of the palms (it is slightly better than Hori in this aspect). It has an eight-button layout. It has bolts on the surface, though they tend not to get in the way. The hollow plastic used for the controller box feels kind of weak, weaker than Hori versions. Opening the controller is a bit diffi*** (and voids the warranty); the bottom screws are diffi*** to turn and wear easily; because of slightly small holes, removing the snap-in buttons is diffi*** (I suggest using gloves and/or tools for this); there is also a lot of annoying glue on many fasteners. As a newly manufactured product, they often come with some light scratches on the control panel (mine did). And the controller box is pretty bulky.
The Madcatz controllers have some things improved over the Hori designs. They are actually new designs and not the stale rehash of the same thicker designs Hori has been using over and over again; the layout is different, though I'm not partial to either the Sega or Vewlix layout. The tournament lock switch, individual turbo settings, cord compartment (though wireless and a USB connector would have been better, and more expensive), wire harnesses and terminal strip, heat-shrink tubing, and headphone jack are great additions.
The Madcatz TE joystick is another great choice for people wanting a high quality joystick. (link) |
|