If you find the correct drivers for your controller to USB device, anything else you do may not matter.You seem pretty adept, especially if you want to write your own HID driver. This may not include a solution but it is a little too long for a comment. If I were able to confirm the pad / adapter worked using the old drivers, I could probably start Reverse Engineering one again.
Ideally I would create my own driver after sniffing with WireShark, but at the moment I'm unable to sniff, as I can't easily see the data coming in. How can I force the devices to be recognized as their old versions?Ĭould the driver have updated something other then these devices in device manager? Outranked Drivers: input.inf:HID_DEVICE:00FF1005 Matching Device Id: HID_DEVICE_SYSTEM_GAME Now, if I view Hidden Devices in Device Manager, I can see the 'old' devices from earlier, Device HID\VID_0810&PID_0001&Col02\7&750e0c&0&0001 was configured.Ĭlass Guid: They returned to looking like the generic Twin USB Joystick, however they were still no longer reading inputs. I then uninstalled the drivers using the installer. They then showed up as TWIN PS TO PC CONVERTERīut the new control panel configurator showed absolutely no inputs. (However I was hoping it would show the arrow buttons as buttons, the original drivers were able to do this back on windows xp, but alas, I no longer know the location of that disk.)Īfter installation of a driver (based on visual recognition of the adapter) I made the error of installing the wrong driver, in an attempt to get the axis to show up as button presses allowing simultaneous left/right presses. Input on my dance pad worked, and was showing as button and axis presses.
They initially appeared as a HID Compliant Game Controller, and using the windows 10 setup usb game controllers they were visible as a Twin USB Joystick, I have a cheap USB to playstation 1 / 2 adapter that I was trying to get working using some drivers.