VOGONS


First post, by Errius

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I just fried a joystick by hot-plugging it into a Sound Blaster 16. Strong smell of burning from the stick. I don't know if the card is also damaged. I didn't know this was dangerous. Has anyone had similar experiences?

Is this too much voodoo?

Reply 2 of 8, by Errius

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20 years of doing this and it's never happened before.

What I did do once was zap a sound card by hot-plugging an audio connector which had some sort of earthing problem. I stopped doing that a while ago. But joysticks never a problem.

Is this too much voodoo?

Reply 3 of 8, by keenmaster486

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You can hot-plug joysticks no problem, I do it all the time.

I would guess there's something wrong with the joystick. A short or something.

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Reply 4 of 8, by Scali

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A joystick is just a simple passive circuit. I don't see why hot-plugging would cause problems under normal circumstances. Never did for me anyway.

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Reply 5 of 8, by Errius

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I took the stick apart and don't see any visible damage. Still the smell is very strong. Strange. It's completely dead of course.

Is this too much voodoo?

Reply 7 of 8, by brostenen

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Errius wrote:

I just fried a joystick by hot-plugging it into a Sound Blaster 16. Strong smell of burning from the stick. I don't know if the card is also damaged. I didn't know this was dangerous. Has anyone had similar experiences?

Plugged an Amiga joystick into a COM port, back in the golden 80's.
Nothing prior to USB are really hot-plugable, unless it was expensive back when new.

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Reply 8 of 8, by darry

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The floppy controller, the game port and possibly the COM and LPT ports (not sure about the last two, it was some 25 years ago) on an ISA multi-IO card god fried when I hot-plugged a joystick into our family 386. The IDE controller part kept on working. The IO controller was UMC-based . The joystick was made by Suncom (cannot remember the model, sorry) and survived unscathed.