I currently use my Xbox 1 as an emulation box for various consoles such as NES, Genesis, TG-16, etc. I found the tutorial, linked below, detailing how to use a VGA cable to mod a "fat" Xbox controller as a bridge allowing you to use the original controllers with whatever emulator.
http://www.xerxes3rd.net/projects/Genes ... r_on_Xbox/
I ended up using a DB-16 cable because all the VGA cables I found now have 12 wires. That aside, using this method I was successfully able to convert an original NES pad, TG-16, 6-button Genesis, Super Advantage (sans the slowdown/turbo buttons), 7800 and 2600 joysticks. Many thanks go to xerxes3rd!
So, then my girlfriend gave me a Atari 5200 controller for Christmas....
After looking the controller over, I realized this would have to be addressed in a whole other way due to the analog nature of the 5200 joystick.
First, I will have to convert another Xbox controller as a bridge, but this time, I'll have to use a DB-26 cable (more wires) and solder the specific points of the left analog thumbstick's potentiometers in order to use the 5200 controller completely with the emulator on the Xbox.
After doing some Google research, I've discovered a few things.
1. Both the Xbox 1 and 5200 controllers use potentiometers.
2. The Xbox 1's potentiometer is probably a "100k linear pot" (This is according to a random forum post.)
3. "The resistance for each potentiometer in the 5200 controller ranges from 0 ohms to 500k ohms, with 250k ohms when the potentiometer is in the center" - from the book, Hardware Hacking
Now, I'm not an expert with potentiometers by any means, so I'm hoping some of you will have some advice for me before I move forward. Such as, will this work at all?
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you for your time.


