Hi all, first post here so please be gentle.
OK, my X-55 arrived in the post yesterday and (of course) the first thing I did was set it up and take it for a spin in Elite.
After a fair bit of fiddling with knobs and dials (ooohh er missus) I decided that while I generally love it to tiny little bits, the throttle, even on the lowest stiffness, was causing problems with the whole of the body sliding around my desk. Not that surprising as I have a melamine faced desk.
Ok, so I have a few requirements:
1/ I don't want to have it bolted permanently to the desk (amazingly I do other things at my computer that require me not to have whopping great controllers right next to the keyboard permanently).
2/ I don't want it fixed to the arms of the chair either, partly for the above reason and partly as I don't want to have to move my chair away from my monitors.
3/ I don't mind drilling holes in my desk
So, to summarise, it needs to stop the throttle moving while rapidly changing speed and it needs to be easily removable.
After a certain amount of brain usage (burning smell and steam coming from ears) I came up with the following idea.
Take 8 shelf support pegs (the type you get in furniture flat packs) and drill holes for them so the controllers fit onto them. This will stop entirely any sliding.
Ok, now some measurements: The pegs I used are 4.9mm diameter and require 5mm holes. The mounting holes in the controllers are 6mm.
The positioning of the holes can be found by downloading the mounting dimensions info from the Mad Catz website.
I printed out the image after scaling it correctly, but you can do the same thing by measuring a piece of paper to 164cm by 204cm.
I then used it to mark the centre points for the holes and carefully drilled with the 5mm drill.
The end result is a set of four pegs for each unit that prevents them from moving under all but the most extreme provocation.
Hope this has been of use to someone, if you have any questions, please ask, tho I don't off hand know where to get the shelf pegs (I looked in a random box in my garage/workshop and there they were
)
Dave
OK, my X-55 arrived in the post yesterday and (of course) the first thing I did was set it up and take it for a spin in Elite.
After a fair bit of fiddling with knobs and dials (ooohh er missus) I decided that while I generally love it to tiny little bits, the throttle, even on the lowest stiffness, was causing problems with the whole of the body sliding around my desk. Not that surprising as I have a melamine faced desk.
Ok, so I have a few requirements:
1/ I don't want to have it bolted permanently to the desk (amazingly I do other things at my computer that require me not to have whopping great controllers right next to the keyboard permanently).
2/ I don't want it fixed to the arms of the chair either, partly for the above reason and partly as I don't want to have to move my chair away from my monitors.
3/ I don't mind drilling holes in my desk
So, to summarise, it needs to stop the throttle moving while rapidly changing speed and it needs to be easily removable.
After a certain amount of brain usage (burning smell and steam coming from ears) I came up with the following idea.
Take 8 shelf support pegs (the type you get in furniture flat packs) and drill holes for them so the controllers fit onto them. This will stop entirely any sliding.
Ok, now some measurements: The pegs I used are 4.9mm diameter and require 5mm holes. The mounting holes in the controllers are 6mm.
The positioning of the holes can be found by downloading the mounting dimensions info from the Mad Catz website.
I printed out the image after scaling it correctly, but you can do the same thing by measuring a piece of paper to 164cm by 204cm.
I then used it to mark the centre points for the holes and carefully drilled with the 5mm drill.
The end result is a set of four pegs for each unit that prevents them from moving under all but the most extreme provocation.
Hope this has been of use to someone, if you have any questions, please ask, tho I don't off hand know where to get the shelf pegs (I looked in a random box in my garage/workshop and there they were
Dave