I had a Thrustmaster Mark I flight stick with my old pc system (built circa 1997). We upgraded, and I’d love to use the joystick with our new system, but the new one doesn’t seem to have the proper port for it.
The thrustmaster appears to have a 15-pin male connector. it plugged into the com1 port (serial) of my old pc. the new PC has no com ports- I’ve got usb, a firewire port, and an odd looking port on my video card (Nvidia Geforce).
Are there any adapters for this? Or do I just need to give it up? I’m not in the mood to pay thrustmaster’s rates again, so I’d just go with a cheaper flightstick (something like logitech).
Any help would be appreciated.
-stonebow, who’s still trying to get tie fighter to work in winxp
I had the same issue with an older Sidewinder gamepad. I ended up having to buy a new USB version - unfortunately, I do not think you have any other options at this point (I didn’t).
You could possibly buy an old game port adapter add-in card. While cheap, I don’t think the hassle will be worth it - most newer games are designed to work with the USB versions.
First thing I would make sure is that your computer doesn’t have a game port (MIDI). Many new motherboard have a header on the board that you can hook one up to. If your board has one then you just need the cable. If you don’t know, let me know what type of motherboard you have and I can check for you.
If your motherboard doesn’t have one, you can get a add on sound card. The SB Live! series have a game port on the card itself, while the Audigy series have a header and a port to attach to it.
Thanks, guys!
That adapter is just what I was looking for. Hopefully, it will work. Also found on the radio shack site an adapter that lets our PS2 controllers work in our PC…and that saves me having to buy a PSX controller clone.
May I recommend you take a look at replacing your (assumedly onboard) sound card with a different one? You don’t have to get a 100$ Audigy 2 like my psyco brother did, but for 20$ you can get a decent entry level sound card with more features than your PC has, with a real MIDI/game port that won’t leave you messing with strange USB widgets.