Arqade Asked on June 19, 2021
I have a very old PS2. It worked fine for the longest time, but recently I have a strange problem. Every time I turn it on, no matter which game I use, it acts as if I am holding the analog (or possibly d-pad) left.
As a result, the only thing that works is pressing Start. When I manage to load a game (by just pressing Start repeatedly) the character spins around ceaselessly. The only other control that works is the other analog stick.
This means that in Tony Hawk games, for example, I am constantly spinning in a circle. Using the other analog stick I can observe myself spinning from above, below, or any angle in between, but I can neither stop turning nor change direction using the other stick or d-pad, and as I said, no other controls work.
I have tried turning the machine on with the controller in slot 1, in slot 2, and not plugged in at all. Nothing changes. I followed the instructions here:
How to fix broken controllers/pads?
… although the fact that this is happening even when no controller is plugged in makes me think it is not a controller issue. I am even more sure of this since I went out and purchased a second-hand controller today, and the situation has not changed.
Any ideas?
EDIT:
Borrowed another controller, a non-Sony one this time. No difference. Also took the PS2 apart and cleaned it as best I could, tried inspecting for damage but as before found nothing obvious amiss.
Is it possible this is a software problem? Corrupted OS, maybe…?
EDIT 2:
In desperation to get a Tony Hawk fix, I tried PCSX2 (the PS2 emulator for PC). While in the process of hooking up my controllers to the PC, though, I ran a test and discovered something curious:
One controller is sending constant buttonpress signals for all buttons all the time. The other controller is sending a constant signal for just one buttong (d-pad left), again all the time. Taking them apart and cleaning the contacts had no effect.
I think I need to consider the possibility that both of my controllers and the one I borrowed for testing were all, unlikely though it is, malfunctioning. The system is certainly acting as though a button is being pressed all the time. The fact that it acts the same even with no controller is hard to explain away, though. Just wish I had another PS2 to check with.
Graarrgh!
I ordered a brand new controller from a third-party developer, plugged it in, and it worked fine. Strangest thing is that now the old controllers work too, but only as long as the new one is in the socket when I turn the machine on. As long as the new one is there on startup, I can switch them out and they work fine. But the problem persists as before if I don't do this.
In conclusion, I have no idea why this problem happened, but I did manage to "fix" it. If anyone else has a similar problem, I recommend buying a brand new controller, I guess.
Correct answer by David John Welsh on June 19, 2021
Ive had this problem several times but my fix was very simple. All I ended up doing was removing the controller from the port and putting it back in check your ports on your controller maybe a end is damaged. Also check if the port on the ps2 is broken.
Answered by zeke on June 19, 2021
Your PS2 is broken on the inside and could probably only be fixed if you sent it to Sony, you could try letting it sit there and see if it will stop after a while.
Answered by Wade Panzram on June 19, 2021
When my ps2 controller started pressing buttons I was not pressing I took it apart & put a piece of electrical tape to hold the thin plastic piece (looks like clear scotch tape w/gold thin wires built inside of it) onto the circuit board. The under side of the ps2 controller (on the inside of the controller) has what looks like a piece of dark gray foam built into it that holds the thin plastic piece (looks like clear scotch tape w/gold wires built inside of it) onto the circuit board. The electrical tape I put there assists the dark gray foam piece in having to do it's 'job'. After doing this my ps2 controller worked like new again.
Answered by Johnny AKA Leviathan on June 19, 2021
I have a few dualshock 2 controllers with a permanent depressed 'up' on the Dpad symptom when plugged in. I've desoldered the potentiometers on the Joystick, when plugged in joysticks don't function but the 'up' symptom still exists. I then desoldered the ribbon cable connecting the plastic containing the carbon Dpad and button set from the PCB, when plugged in the 'up' symptom still exists. I got my multimeter and went over every component and checked for continuity from cable in to components, all seemed fine. Can only assume that the main central chip on the PCB itself is faulty as all tracks lead to here. Desoldering this causes the controller not to function when plugged in. I can't find a new or replacement chip, but when I do I will update if this is a fix.
Answered by Elliot on June 19, 2021
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