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Please do not post a support request without first reading and following the advice in https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/3/read-this-first

Gamepads making involuntary movements in Emulation Station

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  • A
    Addison @Brunnis
    last edited by 8 Dec 2017, 09:45

    @brunnis Heya. Quick question for you.....

    How many USB ports are you using on your Pi when testing this?

    B 1 Reply Last reply 8 Dec 2017, 10:19 Reply Quote 0
    • B
      Brunnis @Addison
      last edited by 8 Dec 2017, 10:19

      @addison Just the one for the controller. Out of all the USB ports on my Dell laptop and HP screen, the Pi's is still the most likely to cause phantom presses. So USB power supply might not be where the Pi 3 excels...

      I guess its possible that the phantom issue could reappear once you start loading the other ports. However, if that's the case, I'd be more inclined to just conclude that the Pi 3 itself needs better USB power supply/filtering.

      A 1 Reply Last reply 8 Dec 2017, 19:32 Reply Quote 1
      • A
        Addison @Brunnis
        last edited by 8 Dec 2017, 19:32

        @brunnis Can you test again with at least a secondary controller plugged in, perhaps a USB memory card as well, and whatever else you can think of to shove into those three other ports?

        I get that your solution fairs quite well.

        I'm just asking if it can still handle it all with other junk in the USB ports.

        B 2 Replies Last reply 8 Dec 2017, 20:26 Reply Quote 0
        • B
          Brunnis @Addison
          last edited by 8 Dec 2017, 20:26

          @addison I won't have access to the system over the weekend, but I did already have a SanDisk Extreme 64GB high performance USB thumb drive connected for an hour or two and that didn't produce any issues. Neither did having a keyboard connected. I'll see if I can shove some more stuff into the ports on Monday.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • B
            Brunnis @Addison
            last edited by 14 Dec 2017, 09:45

            @addison I took the controller that was most unstable before the fix and connected it to my RPi3 together with a mechanical USB HDD (Western Digital 2.5"). Unfortunately, this did provoke a few phantom presses. Nothing huge; two phantom presses over four hours.

            I guess the conclusion is that this fix will dratically reduce the risk of phantom presses. However, the combination of a fairly unstable controller and a USB port that provides noisy power can still produce occasional phantom presses. I should point out that I'm using the official power supply for my Pi, so it's not some no-name crappy one. However, since this phantom press issue seems to be very much tied to the quality of the USB power, even just changing to another RPi board could provide different results. This also makes it tricky to verify that a fix is 100% effective.

            Although I would have liked for this fix to have completely eliminated the issue, I'm still glad it works as well as it does. I don't doubt that a more elaborate investigation (using an oscilloscope) could provide a better fix (probably involving adding smaller caps as well), but I won't spend any more time on it.

            S 1 Reply Last reply 24 Jan 2018, 21:25 Reply Quote 2
            • S
              stoo @Brunnis
              last edited by 24 Jan 2018, 21:25

              Just in case anyone is wondering, this issue is not solved between board revisions on the Buffalo controllers. I have both a BSGP801GY and a BGSP815GY. The 815 has packaging that advertises Windows 10 compatibility, the 801 is an older one from the Windows 8 era. There are differences, specifically the 815 has 33Ω resistors at R11 and R12 which are unpopulated on the 801.

              I don't know why they added these resistors (or omitted them in the 801) but the phantom issue remains in the newer revision. Within a few minutes of plugging in the 815 I got this in jstest:

              Event: type 2, time 7408630, number 0, value -32767
              Event: type 2, time 7408640, number 0, value 0
              Event: type 2, time 7835420, number 1, value 16552
              Event: type 2, time 7835430, number 1, value 0

              That's a "full" left and a "half" down on the D-PAD.

              I may try replacing the caps to see if it makes any difference, but in my mind the Buffalo controllers simply cannot be trusted to perform correctly. I'd kinda like to know what chip they're using but I cba scraping the epoxy off to find out.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • S
                stoo
                last edited by 24 Jan 2018, 22:11

                Interestingly, the hardware ID of the Buffalo controller is HID\VID_0583&PID_2060&REV_0100.

                VendorID 0x583 is a company called Rockfire, which leads us to...

                https://rockfire.com.tw/en/products/pc-gameing/gamepad/51-qf-109u-mjolnir.html

                So the controller is a rebadge of a Taiwanese controller, which is hardly a surprise.

                J 1 Reply Last reply 24 Jan 2018, 22:14 Reply Quote 1
                • J
                  jonnykesh @stoo
                  last edited by 24 Jan 2018, 22:14

                  @stoo So, are the older ones just rebranded Rockfire or is this a recent thing? I can't check mine as it died a few months ago.

                  S 1 Reply Last reply 24 Jan 2018, 22:26 Reply Quote 0
                  • S
                    stoo @jonnykesh
                    last edited by 24 Jan 2018, 22:26

                    @jonnykesh Both the iBuffalo 801 and the Buffalo 815 have identical hardware IDs. It's almost certainly the same chip in both of them. I'm guessing Buffalo saw a gap in the Japanese market, went out and found an existing manufacturer who made SNES-type controllers of good-enough quality and said "Just put Buffalo on these and we'll sell them under our brand".

                    J 1 Reply Last reply 24 Jan 2018, 22:31 Reply Quote 1
                    • J
                      jonnykesh @stoo
                      last edited by 24 Jan 2018, 22:31

                      @stoo Mine was an 801 (BSGP801). Honestly I have never seen the Rockfire for sale in Europe. I checked my local Amazon and they aren't there. Someone is missing a trick and a lot of money. These things went from a tenner up to £20 on Amazon as RetroPie became more and more popular. They probably cost about a dollar a piece to put together.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • S
                        stoo
                        last edited by 24 Jan 2018, 22:47

                        Yeah, they're probably only sold in Asia. You can buy them on Taobao (Chinese eBay type site):

                        https://item.taobao.com/item.htm?spm=a312a.7700824.w4004-9946732977.8.1834c87dZ8KMVO&id=548548202517

                        79.80 Chinese Yuan equals £8.79 according to Google which is still expensive for this type of controller. I mean, look at the crap on eBay - you can pick up TWO completely useless, no-brand SNES-type controllers for less than £6.

                        It's just a shame that the Rockfire/Buffalo controllers have this flaw. Even with this flaw they're among the best of a (very) bad bunch!

                        J 1 Reply Last reply 24 Jan 2018, 22:51 Reply Quote 1
                        • J
                          jonnykesh @stoo
                          last edited by 24 Jan 2018, 22:51

                          @stoo They are great (with flaws). I loved mine, was going to replace it until I saw the prices they are going for at the minute. I'm not a tight-ass, but they just aren't worth the price being asked right now, and I'm not a fool. Other options are available!
                          I think iBuffalo just marketed them really well. I still have the box mine came in because I thought it was kinda cool and high quality packaging.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • S
                            stoo
                            last edited by 28 Jan 2018, 19:09

                            Did a little more digging...

                            Out of interest, I git cloned evhz (https://gitlab.com/iankelling/evhz) to my RPi3 and ran it with the Buffalo controller connected. This is what appeared over the course of around 15 seconds (I couldn't figure out how to make evhz add timestamps). I was not touching the controller at all during this time:

                            event0: USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average     0Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     1Hz, Average    62Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    42Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     1Hz, Average    62Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    50Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     3Hz, Average    62Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest    62Hz, Average    54Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    55Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     1Hz, Average    63Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    56Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     1Hz, Average    63Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    57Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    63Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    67Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    71Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest    11Hz, Average    74Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    70Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    73Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     6Hz, Average    76Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    73Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     1Hz, Average    75Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    72Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     1Hz, Average    74Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    71Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     1Hz, Average    73Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    70Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    72Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     2Hz, Average    74Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    72Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     6Hz, Average    73Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    71Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     1Hz, Average    73Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    71Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     3Hz, Average    72Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    70Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     1Hz, Average    72Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    70Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    71Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     4Hz, Average    73Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    71Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    72Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     3Hz, Average    73Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    72Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest     4Hz, Average    73Hz
                            USB,2-axis 8-button gamepad  : Latest   125Hz, Average    71Hz
                            

                            None of my other controllers spam the USB interface like this. My Wired 360 controller sits quietly until I actually make an input. Same for my crappy iNNEXT controllers. Only the Buffalo controllers seem to do this.

                            I don't have enough knowledge of electronics to know what this means so I'm probably not going to investigate further. :P

                            B 1 Reply Last reply 29 Jan 2018, 10:46 Reply Quote 2
                            • B
                              Brunnis @stoo
                              last edited by 29 Jan 2018, 10:46

                              @stoo Thanks for testing. Such crappy pieces of hardware, these Buffalo controllers. Although mine seem stable now, after some pretty long testing, I actually only use them as backups now. I replaced them with SNES Classic controllers + Raphnet low-latency USB adapters. Awesome quality and feel, no ghost input and extremely low latency (~1 ms total from pressing a button until the system has read the value). Downside? It's kind of an expensive solution... :-P

                              S 1 Reply Last reply 30 Jan 2018, 22:58 Reply Quote 2
                              • S
                                stoo @Brunnis
                                last edited by 30 Jan 2018, 22:58

                                @brunnis Actually, I have a couple of Wii Classic Pros lying around gathering dust. Those Raphnet adapters sound ideal... and I've just ordered one. Thanks for the tip.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • T
                                  techiedj
                                  last edited by 20 Apr 2018, 18:56

                                  Just wanted to add my findings. Bought a new 3b+ and some offical WiiU Pro controllers to use and they work PERFECT on the internal BT. (new stretch image)

                                  Though to myself GREAT, imaged Rpi3b card and got TONS of ghost input (Dpad-Right+A) trying to scroll down system romlists. Transfer card to 3b+ and pair same remote, works perfect again.

                                  I had never used with WiiU Pros with the 3b before but there is definately something up with stretch and the WiiU pros. Cant get wifi to scan either.

                                  mituM 1 Reply Last reply 20 Apr 2018, 19:56 Reply Quote 0
                                  • mituM
                                    mitu Global Moderator @techiedj
                                    last edited by 20 Apr 2018, 19:56

                                    @techiedj said in Gamepads making involuntary movements in Emulation Station:

                                    Cant get wifi to scan either.

                                    I assume you've followed the install instructions and set up your country code before trying to make Wifi working.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • A Addison referenced this topic on 15 Jul 2023, 19:40
                                    • mituM mitu referenced this topic on 21 Jan 2024, 15:24
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