Questions regarding generic Wii Pro controller on x86 install
-
Thanks a lot for testing this out for me! That is very kind of you. It sounds very positive, and that makes total sense about the theory of 'micro stutters' being sent out, which the Pi is registering.
I know there is a risk the BT controller in the Lenovo machine could suffer the same fate, but I think there is a good chance it'll work ok.
Let me know if you have time to do any further testing you mention - I am tempted to take a punt on them and see what happens.
Thanks!
-
Let me know if you have time to do any further testing you mention - I am tempted to take a punt on them and see what happens.
I will, but testing them on your own with a refund option is a good idea, since my tests can only tell you so much about your own hardware environment.
-
Absolutely agree, I think the info you have given me so far gives me the confidence they are likely to work, so that's great. It all comes down to the BT module in my machine but it's definitely different to the Pi one.
-
Sorry for the late answer, but my weekends are pretty full right now. Too many x-mas and winter fairs to visit. o/ᵁ ᵁ\o *ᴷᴸᴵᴺᴷ*
Nevertheless, I did some further testing. The controllers work flawlessly with my MSI Cubi 3 mini pc which has an Intel Bluetooth 7265 chipset as far as I could determine. They also disconnected after five minutes and they didn't show any ghost inputs in those five minutes.
I'd say it's very likely that a) the five minutes are hard-coded and b) the ghost inputs are mainly a problem with the Pi's hardware and/or drivers, even if only because of a too high sensivity for any micro-stuttering of the controllers.
-
Hey there, thanks for taking the time to check this out. I know what you mean, was at a Christmas market myself yesterday! It's a busy old month!
Sounds really good and I agree with everything you say. The two pack of controllers are OOS on Amazon prime at the moment - they do sell them singularly, but at higher cost than buying two in a pack.
Will wait for them to come back in or take a punt on one
for now and see how it goes! If I do so I'll come back to this thread with my findings.Thanks for all of your help!
-
Hey there,
Just an update for you - I ended up ordering 2 of the black Qumox controllers, but unfortunately they were both damaged and I could get neither of them paired up! The first one had clearly been tampered with - the seal was broken and the screw head on the back above the label was rounded off, and the second one had a nasty scratch along the fascia. Quite bad really!
I thought i'd test them anyway, but when trying to sync to Retropie, they were not seen in the bluetooth registration screen at all. My other PC and TV were showing up fine though.
The controllers also didn't show up on my Windows and Linux Mint machine. Tried all variations of pressing sync and power, etc at different intervals.
So as well as being damaged, I couldn't get them working anyway.
I ordered a replacement pair just now and will be sending these back in the morning. Maybe second time lucky...
Just wanted to confirm...you didn't need to do anything out of the ordinary with your MSI Cubi 3 mini pc in terms of pairing these up did you?
Thanks!
-
@movisman My sympathies … it shows why it's good to have a refund or replacement option.
And no, I didn't have to do anything special to pair the controllers with my Cubi 3. They just showed up in Kubuntu's bluetooth pairing dialog. I use one of them with Retropie and Kodi on the Cubi 3 which is connected to my video projector.
edit: typo
-
Hey there, ah cheers for clarifying. I figured that was the case, they should have just appeared and I did try them on three machines. Never mind though - two more being delivered tomorrow so hopefully these will work!!! Will keep you posted!
Cheers
-
Hmmm! The new controllers arrived, these ones were actually boxed with a sticker to peel off the fascia and included a charging cable! The other two were just in a bag without any of this (and they were damaged as I mentioned)!
So that was a good start. Unfortunately though neither of them will show up as devices to pair no matter what I try, which is a real shame.
I think these controllers probably do not work with the built in bluetooth adapter in this IBM m93p. I guess only options now are to return these and try official, pick up a USB bluetooth dongle, or shell out for the Mayflash adapter.
Shame!!
-
@movisman Just to be sure, do your controllers have a little red button on the underside? If so, did you use this button for pairing?
I'm asking because I forgot about this button after I didn't used my controllers for some time, and I wondered why they wouldn't pair with a new machine (my Cubi 3) when I just pressed any of their normal buttons. When I realized my error, it was a real facepalm moment.
If you did use the red button and/or the controllers do pair with other machines, you may be right about the other options.
-
Hey there,
Yeah I used the sync button on the back to try and pair it, at various intervals of the searching (pressing just before, during etc). It flashes away but only my TV and other laptop appear in the bluetooth list.
Just trying to decide whether to send these back and obtain an original one, as maybe that could work with no extra adapters. Either that or will stump up for a Mayflash which seems to have good success. I found an old bluetooth dongle, unsure of chipset but that also didn't work, it did exactly the same (found TV and laptop but no controllers).
Thanks!
-
@movisman Do you have the option to try them on another machine with a different BT chipset?
Alas, I don't know how similar the Wii U Pro clones are to the originals, so I can't say if the latter have a bigger chance of success.
It may be a bit unfair to the vendor, but at this point and in your place, I would consider buying both the originals and a Mayflash adapter, test both of them, and then refund the inferior one(s). At least I would keep the clones until I'd have checked if the originals are in fact better.
-
I tried to pair the controllers with two different DELL Latitude laptops, one is a DELL E5550 running Mint and the other a DELL E7470 running Windows 10. I need to check out what chipset both of these laptops use, but I could not get either controller paired to these either.
I imagine if I use a Mayflash adapter, it'll work fine, but ideally I didn't want to rely on a separate adapter, which costs nearly the same as these two controllers. However, i'm wondering if I purchased an official controller, with my hardware maybe i'd have the same result and need an adapter regardless. It's impossible to know without picking up an official one somewhere I guess.
One other question I had, a few posts on reddit suggest that when using the Wii Pro controller, the 'home' button cannot be mapped to anything, whereas some other posts suggest it can be mapped like any other button. What is your experience with this?
Thanks!
-
@movisman said in Questions regarding generic Wii Pro controller on x86 install:
I tried to pair the controllers with two different DELL Latitude laptops, one is a DELL E5550 running Mint and the other a DELL E7470 running Windows 10. I need to check out what chipset both of these laptops use, but I could not get either controller paired to these either.
That is strange, given that I can pair my Qumox Wii U Pro controllers with my Pi and my Cubi 3 without any adapter (they'll only get ghost inputs on the Pi). I even tested the direct Pi connection just now, in case something had changed in RetroPie since I bought the Mayflash adapter. But it still worked without problems.
Are your controllers also from Qumox? If so, they may have changed the hardware since I bought them roughly a year ago. Or you were so "lucky" to get faulty controllers each time, which would be very strange on its own.
One other question I had, a few posts on reddit suggest that when using the Wii Pro controller, the 'home' button cannot be mapped to anything, whereas some other posts suggest it can be mapped like any other button. What is your experience with this?
I just tested this on the Cubi 3. I could bind the home button to any button that I tested, namely Start, Hotkey, and A. They worked as such in ES and lr-mame2003. The home button appears as button 10 in the input configuration dialog of ES.
-
Yeah really strange. The controllers are definitely from Qumox, I even tried pairing with two colleagues laptops at work today plus my phone, and none of the devices could see the controllers when the sync button was pressed (lights flashing).
It is possible they are faulty, but I reckon these might be either A) really fussy with the bluetooth chipset or B) a possible hardware change which means they would need an adapter of sorts in order to function correctly.
Glad to know your home button works and is mappable, a few other posts suggested it wasn't seen, but this might have been when using the Mayflash adapter.
I'm tempted to return these and go back to square one, see if I can find some controllers which don't require any sort of adapter in order to function.
I have a DS4 which i'm going to try, not for a permanent solution but just to see if it works.
Cheers!
-
@movisman said in Questions regarding generic Wii Pro controller on x86 install:
Glad to know your home button works and is mappable, a few other posts suggested it wasn't seen, but this might have been when using the Mayflash adapter.
You're right! I just tested it on my Pi with the adapter, and the home button can't be bound to any button. I didn't notice this because I normally have no use for the button. :)
-
Right! Is that on the 'dinput' setting?
I have a feeling on the 'dinput' setting, where is detects the controller as a generic one (?) the home button maybe cannot be bound.
However if it's changed to 'xinput', it should detect as a 360 controller, and maybe then the home button will work?
Downside to using xinput is apparently this mode only supports one controller, whereas dinput supports 4.
Thanks
-
@movisman Okay, now it's my part to experience strange happenings. The Mayflash adapter already was set to Xinput when the home button didn't work. I then switched it to Dinput to test it, and apart from the name displayed in the input configuration dialog of ES, nothing changed. BUT after I switched back to Xinput, the home button worked! 😒
That said, it may be that the switch just looked like it was set to Xinput, because I used both controllers at the same time with it, whereas Xinput indeed only allows one connection, as I tested just now.
So yes, the home button works in Xinput mode, but not in Dinput mode.
edit: While testing both modes, I noticed a nice feature of the Mayflash adapter. It can switch the input mode on the fly without a reboot or even disconnecting the first controller. The second loses its connection if the adapter is set to Xinput, of course.
-
Ouf of curiosity, I played around with bluetooth pairing on the Linux console. If you haven't sent back the controllers by now, you may try this on any Debian-based Linux system, e.g. Retropie/Raspbian, any Ubuntu variant, or Linux Mint.
sudo apt install bluez-utils # making sure bluetoothctl is installed bluetoothctl
You'll land in the bluetoothctl command line. I'll show you the pairing process of my Qumox controller with the MAC address 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 (
[bluetooth]#
is the command prompt). I'll put commands with little output together in one code block and commands with longer output separate in their own code blocks.[bluetooth]# default-agent Default agent request successful [bluetooth]# power on Changing power on succeeded [bluetooth]# list Controller D4:6D:6D:69:9D:43 cubi [default] [bluetooth]# scan on Discovery started [CHG] Controller D4:6D:6D:69:9D:43 Discovering: yes
Now press the pairing button on the controller. You should see something similar to this:
[NEW] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Nintendo RVL-CNT-01-UC [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 RSSI: -22 [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 RSSI: -37
If you see your controller, you can continue. Like the Linux console (bash in most Debian-based distributions), the bluetoothctl console supports tab completion, so you can just enter the first number of the mac address (e.g. "8") and the tab key will complete it for you.
[bluetooth]# pair 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Attempting to pair with 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Connected: yes [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Modalias: usb:v057Ep0330d0001 [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 UUIDs: 00001124-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 UUIDs: 00001200-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 ServicesResolved: yes [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Paired: yes Pairing successful [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 ServicesResolved: no [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Connected: no
[bluetooth]# devices Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Nintendo RVL-CNT-01-UC [bluetooth]# paired-devices Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Nintendo RVL-CNT-01-UC
[bluetooth]# info 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 (public) Name: Nintendo RVL-CNT-01-UC Alias: Nintendo RVL-CNT-01-UC Class: 0x00000508 Icon: input-gaming Paired: yes Trusted: no Blocked: no Connected: no LegacyPairing: yes UUID: Human Interface Device... (00001124-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb) UUID: PnP Information (00001200-0000-1000-8000-00805f9b34fb) Modalias: usb:v057Ep0330d0001
The device is not trusted automatically (
Trusted: no
), so we'll have to do it manually:[bluetooth]# trust 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Trusted: yes Changing 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 trust succeeded
Now enter this command and press any button on the controller:
[bluetooth]# connect 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Attempting to connect to 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Failed to connect: org.bluez.Error.Failed [CHG] Device 8C:CD:E8:19:57:80 Connected: yes
I actually had to press the
A
button again after the command failed, so I can't say for sure in which order the command and the button press have to be executed. Just experiment. :)help
in the bluetoothctl console will list all of its commands, andexit
will end it.After pairing and trusting the controller like this, it also appeared in the bluetooth applet of my KDE Plasma 5 desktop panel, and I could connect to it via its GUI as if I had paired it that way.
Just another option to pair your current or future controllers …
-
I just stumbled upon these threads.
- https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/14493/retropie-lag-missed-key-inputs-on-oem-ps3-bluetooth-controllers
- https://retropie.org.uk/forum/topic/20303/rpi-3-b-tricky-bluetooth-problem-with-multiple-ps3-controllers
The first poster had to use a BT adapter because his/her wireless PS3 controller had lag and missing inputs with the Pi's own BT. In the second thread, it's suggested that turning off WIFI can improve connections to BT controllers by strengthening the BT signal. The latter also links to this script from @cyperghost for easily switching the WIFI on and off.
Just FYI that BT adapters may be a good idea in general, and that disabling WIFI might help with bitchy BT controllers. 😉
edit: some typos, it's definitely too early in my part of the world to write comprehensive forum posts. 😒
Contributions to the project are always appreciated, so if you would like to support us with a donation you can do so here.
Hosting provided by Mythic-Beasts. See the Hosting Information page for more information.