Wiimote usb ir device.
Wiimote usb ir device.
Build an Infrared light.
In order to use the Nintendo Wiimote correctly you must have an infrared light source shining from the monitor's location. This can easily be done by buying the battery powered wireless “sensor”. But these can cost about $8 to $13 at the store and will require batteries. What I wanted was a USB IR LED. I was able to for about $6 by breaking open a usb led laptop light and switching out the LED for the infrared LED. It took me about 15 minutes from start to finish and I have no prior experience with soldering. After testing it I protected each exposed section with electric tape and slapped on some duct tape to make it a bit stronger. Important note: I did have to steal the resistor off the original LED and solder it back on.
I did go out and buy $18 worth of parts to build a battery powered version. It would have been fun but now I'm going to return most of these things to the store. I will keep the soldering gun since I really like it and will use it to build other custom parts.
In order to use the Nintendo Wiimote correctly you must have an infrared light source shining from the monitor's location. This can easily be done by buying the battery powered wireless “sensor”. But these can cost about $8 to $13 at the store and will require batteries. What I wanted was a USB IR LED. I was able to for about $6 by breaking open a usb led laptop light and switching out the LED for the infrared LED. It took me about 15 minutes from start to finish and I have no prior experience with soldering. After testing it I protected each exposed section with electric tape and slapped on some duct tape to make it a bit stronger. Important note: I did have to steal the resistor off the original LED and solder it back on.
I did go out and buy $18 worth of parts to build a battery powered version. It would have been fun but now I'm going to return most of these things to the store. I will keep the soldering gun since I really like it and will use it to build other custom parts.
- SuperSheep
- DBB Benefactor
- Posts: 935
- Joined: Sun Jun 03, 2001 2:01 am
- Location: Illinois
- CDN_Merlin
- DBB_Master
- Posts: 9781
- Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
- Location: Capital Of Canada
Re:
Cheap and no need for a surface.Foil wrote:Interesting. Using a wireless mouse and/or remote seems to work just fine for my media PC. What's the advantage of using the Wiimote?
bingoGrendel wrote:Cheap and no need for a surface.
We quickly found out it was hard to use a mouse on a couch. So we bought a little rolly table but no one liked that either. We wanted something like the logitech air mouse but much cheaper. The wiimote seems to work better and there's lots of documentation on re-mapping all the buttons. And with the raido bluetooth connection the buttons all still work anywhere in our apartment.
Re:
[quote="snoopy"]1. Do you have a link to documentation about the implementation? I.E. you need a software & hardware interface to your computer, right?/quote]
Yeah there's all kinds of software to make it work. I know there's one for windows. I'm using ubuntu with it. The software part was pretty straight forward.
Yeah there's all kinds of software to make it work. I know there's one for windows. I'm using ubuntu with it. The software part was pretty straight forward.