Alkaline Posted September 29, 2014 Posted September 29, 2014 Hi, Just like topic. Im sick of making new profiles every mission and setting up countermeasures... X-55 Rhino guide to configure the Mouse Nipple to work as TDC slew! My rig AMD FX-8320 @ 4.4GHz 8GB RAM R9 270x 2GB SSD Win 8.1 Pro
Faelwolf Posted September 29, 2014 Posted September 29, 2014 Yes, but as far as I know, you will have to edit the missions to make it persistent. You can also make custom loadouts that you can easily select in the mission editor rather than manually adjust each time. That will take a little bit of file editing work, which is a bit above my pay grade. But there are tutorials on it that should come up in a search.
redterror Posted September 29, 2014 Posted September 29, 2014 Short of a proper data cartridge, you can edit the lua files which define the profiles. They live at (approximately): C:\Program Files\Eagle Dynamics\DCS World\Mods\aircraft\A-10C\Cockpit\Scripts\AN_ALE40V\device\AN_ALE40V_params.lua Open that file up in a text editor and add your own custom profiles at the bottom. Be aware that updates will reset this file, so save a copy.
JayPee Posted September 29, 2014 Posted September 29, 2014 (edited) Short of a proper data cartridge, you can use this small tool to simulate the uploading of custom CMS profiles That's right:thumbup: Sheets are unprotected so you're free to mess up the functionality although I wouldn't recommend it.CMS Configurator.zip Edited October 2, 2014 by JayPee i7 4790K: 4.8GHz, 1.328V (manual) MSI GTX 970: 1,504MHz core, 1.250V, 8GHz memory
txmtb Posted September 29, 2014 Posted September 29, 2014 Short of a proper data cartridge, you can edit the lua files which define the profiles. They live at (approximately): C:\Program Files\Eagle Dynamics\DCS World\Mods\aircraft\A-10C\Cockpit\Scripts\AN_ALE40V\device\AN_ALE40V_params.lua Open that file up in a text editor and add your own custom profiles at the bottom. Be aware that updates will reset this file, so save a copy. +1 This is how I do mine, then use JSGME to remove it before an update and put it back afterwards. Win 10 64 Pro, MSI Z390 I7-9700K @5ghz Kraken Z63, 32Gb Corsair Dominator, MSI RTX-2070, 1TB NVME 2TB SSD's, TM Warthog, Pro Rudders, OpenTrack w/ IR Clip
redterror Posted September 30, 2014 Posted September 30, 2014 +1 This is how I do mine, then use JSGME to remove it before an update and put it back afterwards. JSGME was what I was missing - I knew someone must have scratched this itch, I just didn't have the google-fu for it. Thanks!
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