Difference between revisions of "Joystick Y-cables"

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These were made by 3rd party vendors as a replacement to the original [[Amstrad JY-1/JY-2 joysticks|JY-2 joystick]] for the Amstrad CPC computers.
 
These were made by 3rd party vendors as a replacement to the original [[Amstrad JY-1/JY-2 joysticks|JY-2 joystick]] for the Amstrad CPC computers.
  
In order to push sales of Amstrad's own joysticks, Amstrad designed the CPC with one joystick port only which had two common pins. The idea was to sell one joystick which forwarded the second common signal to a built-in joystick port, to which the second joystick could be connected.
+
In order to push sales of Amstrad's own joysticks, Amstrad designed the CPC with one joystick port only which had two common signal pins. The idea was to sell one joystick which forwarded the second common signal to a built-in joystick port, to which the second joystick could be connected.
  
 
As the quality of the Amstrad joysticks was lousy, using an Y-cable together with other joysticks was the preferred solution.
 
As the quality of the Amstrad joysticks was lousy, using an Y-cable together with other joysticks was the preferred solution.

Revision as of 07:40, 24 November 2009

Joystick Y-cable
Joystick Y-cable wiring diagram

These were made by 3rd party vendors as a replacement to the original JY-2 joystick for the Amstrad CPC computers.

In order to push sales of Amstrad's own joysticks, Amstrad designed the CPC with one joystick port only which had two common signal pins. The idea was to sell one joystick which forwarded the second common signal to a built-in joystick port, to which the second joystick could be connected.

As the quality of the Amstrad joysticks was lousy, using an Y-cable together with other joysticks was the preferred solution.

See Also

Joystick Splitter