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Raspberry Pi Forum Are pull-up resistors needed for a USB joystick controller?
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Related

Are pull-up resistors needed for a USB joystick controller?

andywest
andywest over 7 years ago

I recently purchased a USB encoder for arcade joysticks (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00UUROWWK) to use with my Raspberry Pi 3 Model B.

 

The encoder is correctly recognized as a joystick in Raspbian, and by shorting button pins I can see the status change. Then it occurred to me that this might be a bad idea.

 

Since this will be used in a portable game system, I intend to use tactile button switches with the encoder (https://www.adafruit.com/product/367) instead of actual arcade buttons. My question is, do I need to use pull-up resistors with these switches? I think if I were to use the GPIO pins on the Pi, there are internal pull-up resistors that can be used. But as this is a separate, USB-based board, I wasn't sure.

 

I'm hoping there are enough GPIO pins to make using this board unnecessary anyway, but just in case...

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  • andywest
    0 andywest over 7 years ago

    After a bit of research I'm going to answer my own question. It looks like arcade push buttons use micro switches. There are no resistors or anything special inside, and when closed the resistance should be close to zero.

     

    My conclusion is that the small tactile button switches can be wired directly to the encoder without any resistors. Feel free to correct me if this is wrong, and I apologize for the noise. This is all new to me.

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  • andywest
    0 andywest over 7 years ago

    After a bit of research I'm going to answer my own question. It looks like arcade push buttons use micro switches. There are no resistors or anything special inside, and when closed the resistance should be close to zero.

     

    My conclusion is that the small tactile button switches can be wired directly to the encoder without any resistors. Feel free to correct me if this is wrong, and I apologize for the noise. This is all new to me.

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