Wouldn't it just be easier to pull back the green cover and replace the white potentiometer part without having to solder? I do this to my controllers when they develop drift and no soldering is required.
Quicker, yes. However the bit that gets worn is usually the carbon track, not the metal wiper spring assembly. The carbon track is embedded in the green part of the potentiometer. Perhaps yours just needed cleaning and the carbon track was okay.
That's so cool. I could have really used you to fix all of the guitar hero guitars I messed up
I've never worked on one of those but I'd like to give it a try. :)
Wouldn't it just be easier to pull back the green cover and replace the white potentiometer part without having to solder? I do this to my controllers when they develop drift and no soldering is required.
Quicker, yes. However the bit that gets worn is usually the carbon track, not the metal wiper spring assembly. The carbon track is embedded in the green part of the potentiometer. Perhaps yours just needed cleaning and the carbon track was okay.
@@JustInspiredKent Totally agree with you.
I would rather replace all analogs with those with the Hall effect
I'm currently experimenting with different versions of the hall effect pots before I offer it as an option.
@@JustInspiredKent I installed Gulikit TMR sticks on my PS4 controller and they're the best feeling analogs I've had since the Dreamcast controller
Try the Gulikit TMR, I’ve done over 20 controllers and they work great.
@@southernstyle8835 Thanks for the recommendation. I'll get some.
same ol version 2 dualsense... some special edition. im boycotting playstation till they make hall effect sticks standard