Received: from apple.com by karazm.math.UH.EDU with SMTP id AA29470 (5.65c/IDA-1.4.4 for ); Fri, 18 Oct 1991 15:56:47 -0500 Received: by apple.com (5.61/18-Oct-1991-eef) id AA27173; Fri, 18 Oct 91 13:30:44 -0700 for Received: by motcsd.csd.mot.com (/\=-/\ Smail3.1.18.1 #18.4) id ; Fri, 18 Oct 91 13:28 PDT Received: by roi.ca41.csd.mot.com (smail2.5/CSDmail1.0, Motorola Inc.) id AA15238; 18 Oct 91 13:25:27 PDT (Fri) To: glove-list@karazm.math.uh.edu, jdb9608@cs.rit.edu Subject: Re: sega glasses available? Message-Id: <9110181325.AA15226@roi.ca41.csd.mot.com> Date: 18 Oct 91 13:25:25 PDT (Fri) From: Lance Norskog Another source of glasses is a product from Haitex (inc. or something) in Charleston, S. Carolina. These are surplus Nintendo glasses packaged with a box half the size of a cigarette pack. The box takes 5V, Ground, and a control line and controls one or two goggles. These are built for the Amiga and should be available from a hip Amiga dealer near you. The Haitex BBS had the pinouts for the 9-pin Amiga joystick connector; I've got them stashed somewhere. The things list for $110 and are built and solidly packaged. A deal for we non-electronics types. The Nintendo goggles (welder's helmet actually) were never marketed in the states. Lance Norskog