They're only interfering because of noisy pots, try adding a dead zone on your toe brakes so the little jitter doesn't cancel out what your brake lever is doing. This may require a little creativity with the axis tuning so you're not putting the deadzone in the middle of the axis where you don't want it for the brakes, the slider option is probably your friend here.
Are you Bast on the F99th? I could hop on teamspeak later today and help you out.
This guy here. https://www.ebay.com/itm/462-JOYSICK-ULTRA-MSI/292411568241?hash=item4415167071:g:JdUAAOSwNMVaXm9r
From what I can tell I don't think it's wired any different than the sensor you're using, so I'm a bit confused on the execution required.
Well, it's more reasonable than the hundreds or more you would spend on the other limited options.
This is the issue. Everyone going on and on about stick settings is missing this. When you bank, putting the cyclic back to center is not enough to stop it from continuing to roll, you need cyclic in the opposite direction to arrest it. It doesn't feel right and it's not a stick problem or a settings problem.
That's just the way the Gazelle feels (in DCS, anyways).
I also greatly dislike the need for "counter cyclic" all the time, and it's one of the reasons I haven't touched it in a while. It doesn't feel right at all.
I have found another force sensing mini joystick that looks like it would be suitable in a reasonable price range ($100). However looking at the wiring diagram, it requires both +5v (I'm sure 3.3 would work fine) and -5v. Is that like the sensor you used OP? How do we go about the negative voltage aspect of the wiring?
I'm seeing a number of small 3.3v arduino solutions so that part seems to be taken care of.
It's yellow in DCS. What you're looking at will change how you perceive it. In NTTR it looks obviously yellow. The the Caucasus it makes the green more vivid. It looks just like wearing yellow tinted glasses. Fly in the winter and you'll see it's yellow.
Turn on the camera view on in the TIR software and look for stray light sources. You may need some additional filtering or find ways to block the light.
This is normal, because you're changing how the bind works within the game DCS just resets it. However, you will not lose the binding if you disable the mod, update the game and then re-enable the mod.
I'm not a real life pilot but my understanding is force correlate is for shooting at large buildings and such and that the missile will not hit where the crosshair is aimed, but it will hit somewhere in the general area. Ergo, sniping air defenses at a range longer than the seeker will properly lock the target is a cheap tactic.
I never heard anything about that. I just tested it out and I had no problem hitting a truck dead on from better than 10 miles away.