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Xtrasensory

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About Xtrasensory

  • Birthday March 6

Personal Information

  • Flight Simulators
    DCS A-10C, UH-1H, P51D, FC3, KA50, MI-8, CA, Sabre, F16, L-39
  • Location
    Depends
  • Interests
    yes
  1. Hello. I was trying to run the updater to go from 2.7.5 to 2.7.6. It showed my login screen with name and password but it wont connect and keeps saying incorrect username or password. I reset my password via the website but still with the new password it wont log in. Anyone familiar with this problem?
  2. I would not see it as cheating since in DCS the ingame control position can differ from your joystick position. This would not be possible IRL since the trim in the huey is just a magnetic brake. I start the terrain decel with an increase in collective to be able to 'rotate' around the tail, this will help you once the caucus map has collidable trees. Thereafter lower the collective but not all the way down, since you dont want to enter an autorotation and decouple the transmission. Just a few psi of torque will keep rotor rpm in limits. simultaneously Raise the nose, but dont overdo it since you also need to be able to maintain your altitude and the higher you raise the nose the more (insufficient) power you need to keep you from building up a sink rate. A headwind will allow you to to a quicker decel. If stopping with a tailwind, you need to lower the nose (towards hovering attitude) earlier while approaching etl/hover and accept a longer decel. This procedure will also work with a 180, just apply bank once around 50-60 knots. Ofcourse the amount of nose high in the final part will depend on power available, weight, wind and if your doing it OGE or IGE.
  3. I assume you mean collective? Else that would be your problem. Once slowing down and especially below 30-40kts you need to increase collective while maintaining your decelerative attitude with cyclic. And as Gunfighter Six mentioned. If you are taking off and intend to land on the same location you should have enough power.
  4. In controls menu look for the tab axis command I believe.
  5. Look for the collective axis in the controls menu. A helicopter uses collective to increase and decrease power.
  6. Ah thought you said you descended with 70km/h. Will check. You are right that you should see the rotor RPM increase if you just dump the collective. Still that is not a VRS. That will come in play as soon as you start to pull collective to arrest your descent.
  7. Was also responding to that post aswell :)
  8. As I said: and/or get airspeed to move out of the colum. Either foward, left, right. :)
  9. VRS and the way the rotor is driven during autorotations are two completely different things. You need three factors to get into VRS: 1. Low airspeed (roughly at orbelow ETL) 2. A rate of descent 3. Power applied. All three factors need to be present in order to get VRS or settling with power. Thats why in an autorotation with low airspeed, or with the collective all the way down you are not in a VRS (no power applied). Also you will not get in VRS if you still have a lot of forward airspeed. To get out of VRS you need a reduction in power and/or get airspeed (either forward or left or right to move out of the "dirty" air colum) How the rotor is responding in an autorotation or when you dump the collective and pull aft cyclic is still being worked on (increase or decrease of RPM in regards to your conrol inputs).
  10. Your joystick is centered or do you keep it in that position? If you turn off the magnetic trim it should stay in hat position if your joystick is not centered.
  11. When you turn on the flir you will here a ticking sounds. when it stops its good to go
  12. If you use the control indicator youll see the current position of your controls and the position where the auto pilot holds them. just align the red with the white indicators and disengage.
  13. As far as I know, no. That way you will not blast off your minigun with a rocket when the copilot is shooting off angle and downward.
  14. The pitch down moment is caused by the drop in collective. Apply a little aft cyclic to maintain the helicopters attitude simultaneously while lowering the collective. You are probably to slow with lowering the collective while rotorspeed decays, the lower the RPM the less your control inputs will have effect. So either try entering the autorotation with the procedure Gunfighter Six described (lower collective first, then retard throttle) or if you simulate an actual sudden engine failure, be quicker with lowering the collective and apply aft cyclic to keep the attitude.
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