So the only PS2 port they had was an odd 4x2 PS2 header, the colors are Red, Brown, Orange, Black, I am going to just hook them into my header after removing them from their block, but whats the proper order does anyone know off the top of there head?
You don't want to get it wrong or there could be damage. Mobo header pinouts don't have a standard, it's usually found in the manual. There are a few good threads on this stuff around around here, one: PS/2 Bracket for Asus Motherboard Header
You don't want to get it wrong or there could be damage. Mobo header pinouts don't have a standard, it's usually found in the manual. There are a few good threads on this stuff around around here, one: PS/2 Bracket for Asus Motherboard Header
well i read the manual the pinout isnt in it, i guess ill get an ISA Seruial/PS2 card 🤣 or get a serial mouse and a serial port header
You don't want to get it wrong or there could be damage. Mobo header pinouts don't have a standard, it's usually found in the manual. There are a few good threads on this stuff around around here, one: PS/2 Bracket for Asus Motherboard Header
well i read the manual the pinout isnt in it, i guess ill get an ISA Seruial/PS2 card 🤣 or get a serial mouse and a serial port header
PS/2 is definitely worth some effort, much preferable over serial. What motherboard do you have?
Yep, they came with their own adapter and there's not much info. Epox used the following pinout with one Slot 1 board: Pin 1 = Data, Pin 2 = CLK, Pin 3 = GND, Pin 4 = NC, Pin 5 = Vcc. It'd be best to make absolutely certain ground and Vcc are the right way around.
Btw is there a colour code with this ps/2 conectors?
I have 1 that has green,yellow,brown and black coloured cables and i don't have a multimeter so i don't know which is which.
Get a $5 multimeter - that should be enough to find out which lines are VCC, GND and which hold data (once you have GND and VCC down you can experiment).
Wouldn't want to kill your (expensive) setup because you shorted out something.
Get a $5 multimeter - that should be enough to find out which lines are VCC, GND and which hold data (once you have GND and VCC down you can experiment).
Wouldn't want to kill your (expensive) setup because you shorted out something.
^^ this ^^
You need to find witch one is +5v and witch one is GND. Once you got that pat, there is no risk of damaging the mainboard. Test the pins on the motherboard first (careful not to short the pins with the multimeter) then test the pins on whatever PS/2 header you own.
If your PS/2 header looks like that (5 pin block, 2nd pin not connected) then you just need to move the pins at the end of the header to mach your motherboard after you have located GND and VCC+. If you get 5V on the multimeter, red is VCC and black is Ground. If you get -5V it's the other way around.