Now just strip your 9V battery connector wires, crimp those to the power pins of your Sensor bar with the butt connectors (battery red to Wii red, battery black to Wii orange). We have no idea how ...
As we previewed yesterday, Wirelesssensorbar.com is the first company to launch what many Wii gamers have been yearning for since the Wii came out: a wireless sensor bar. The official sensor bar ...
With this new wireless Wii sensor bar you get the benefit of a wireless sensor bar, but if you wind up leaving it setting on top of your TV anyways, it has a secondary useful function, telling time.
You couldn't really accuse the Wii of having too many wires – part of it's charm is the simplicity of the back-panel, having just power, A/V out, the connection for the Sensor Bar and the ubiquitous ...
It can be fun to upgrade your gaming setup: with just a few tweaks here and there, the entire gaming experience can be more enjoyable. It may not be sexy to talk about, say, wireless sensor bars, but ...
Back when the Wii first launched, many owners, including a lot of IGN editors, realized that the necessity of connecting the sensor bar to the Wii could be a real hassle, especially for those using ...
Once gamers figured out that the Wii sensor bar was little more than a housing for an array of LEDs, one had to figure some hacks would come soon. First, someone figured out that a couple of IR-based ...
Leave it to third party manufacturers to devise a Wii sensor bar that’s both wireless and cheap-looking. No doubt easy to manufacture—since you can replace your Wii sensor bar with candles—this ...
If you like to hook your Nintendo Wii at different locations and/or want one less cable floating around behind your TV, the wireless Wii sensor bar is definitely something to check out. The wireless ...
Maxconsole has picked up on a rumor that Nyko is developing a cable-free Wii sensor bar using 2.4GHz wireless technology, with a 30-foot range. The device is expected to retail for $30 and, if it does ...
Once hackers figured out that the Wii "sensor bar" was just a strip of infrared LEDs, it became obvious that a wireless version could be easily hacked up. Now, one entrepreneur is selling his homemade ...