The right bumper (is that the right word? I mean that button above the right trigger) on my Gioteck VX-2 controller was taking an unreasonable amount of pressure to register so I decided to open it up and check out what was going on in there.
When I did so I was a little stumped because the this button thingy didn't make sense to me.
http://imgur.com/mkHKkVl
http://imgur.com/WZKq26y I was confused because I expected there to be some kind of metallic thing under the rubber thing that would complete a circuit when pressed against the board, but it looks like that on the metal there are two rectangular black things where the button presses down. And another thing: http://imgur.com/SZuItuh Those black things under the rubber part that are supposed to make contact with the other black parts, (that I don't know the material of) they bend and feel rubbery. Not at all what I was expecting. Surely these are not meant to be conductive? How could these possibly close a circuit?
This leaves me utterly confused because to make this bumper button more responsive I should know how this button operates but I have no idea how I should make it happen. If I just short pin number 1 and the middle pin I get the response of the right bumper button being pressed but I have no idea if that is how this switch is supposed to work. What if this is some kind of capacitance based switch? No idea what's the point of implementing something like that but what do I know of electronics design?
Swapping the rubber part from the left trigger/bumper button board to the right side changes nothing. The button still needs too much force to make it register whereas the left button does perfectly fine with the right rubber part.
So there must be something wrong with the right board piece, right? How can I fix this thing? I was thinking that if I manage to solder on some tiny aluminum foil pieces to the board to make a better contact area that might fix the problem. Any suggestions?
When I did so I was a little stumped because the this button thingy didn't make sense to me.
http://imgur.com/mkHKkVl
http://imgur.com/WZKq26y I was confused because I expected there to be some kind of metallic thing under the rubber thing that would complete a circuit when pressed against the board, but it looks like that on the metal there are two rectangular black things where the button presses down. And another thing: http://imgur.com/SZuItuh Those black things under the rubber part that are supposed to make contact with the other black parts, (that I don't know the material of) they bend and feel rubbery. Not at all what I was expecting. Surely these are not meant to be conductive? How could these possibly close a circuit?
This leaves me utterly confused because to make this bumper button more responsive I should know how this button operates but I have no idea how I should make it happen. If I just short pin number 1 and the middle pin I get the response of the right bumper button being pressed but I have no idea if that is how this switch is supposed to work. What if this is some kind of capacitance based switch? No idea what's the point of implementing something like that but what do I know of electronics design?
Swapping the rubber part from the left trigger/bumper button board to the right side changes nothing. The button still needs too much force to make it register whereas the left button does perfectly fine with the right rubber part.
So there must be something wrong with the right board piece, right? How can I fix this thing? I was thinking that if I manage to solder on some tiny aluminum foil pieces to the board to make a better contact area that might fix the problem. Any suggestions?