MrDieing Posted December 4, 2017 Posted December 4, 2017 In the Pocket Guide there the term 'Hover Stop' is used several times. E.g. Place nozzles in Hover Stop. I am not entirely able to find out what exactly this means, I have searched the Pocket Guide and the forums and I found out that is has something to do with the STO Stop Lever and detents etc. Is anybody able to tell how much degrees the nozzles should be deflected for them to be in Hover Stop? ''Greed is a bottomless pit which exhausts the person in an endless effort to satisfy the need without ever reaching satisfaction.'' Erich Fromm
Nero.ger Posted December 4, 2017 Posted December 4, 2017 82-84 deg comes into my head, but dont ask me where i got that numbers from 'controlling' the Ka50 feels like a discussion with the Autopilot and trim system about the flight direction.
mvsgas Posted December 4, 2017 Posted December 4, 2017 AFAIK, it is an physical stop on the throttle panel To whom it may concern, I am an idiot, unfortunately for the world, I have a internet connection and a fondness for beer....apologies for that. Thank you for you patience. Many people don't want the truth, they want constant reassurance that whatever misconception/fallacies they believe in are true..
fjacobsen Posted December 4, 2017 Posted December 4, 2017 (edited) The Braking stop is a fixed stop at 99° The Hover stop i s a fixed stop at 82° than can be bypassed by liften the Nozzle lever up over it and then back further to the Braking stop. The STO stop is an adjustable lever to set a variable Nozzle stop. Edited December 4, 2017 by fjacobsen | i7-10700K 3.8-5.1Ghz | 64GB RAM | RTX 4070 12GB | 1x1TB M.2. NVMe SSD | 1x2TB M.2. NVMe SSD | 2x2TB SATA SSD | 1x2TB HDD 7200 RPM | Win10 Home 64bit | Meta Quest 3 |
MrDieing Posted December 4, 2017 Author Posted December 4, 2017 Thanks for all your info guys! Im assuming this is going to be implemented later on? ''Greed is a bottomless pit which exhausts the person in an endless effort to satisfy the need without ever reaching satisfaction.'' Erich Fromm
104th_Maverick Posted December 4, 2017 Posted December 4, 2017 Its a working feature at the moment mate. Look at the bottom of your throttle quadrant, you ll see a little black lever down the bottom that you can move and set to any nozzle position so you wont select past that. [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] 104th Phoenix Wing Commander / Total Poser / Elitist / Hero / Chad www.104thPhoenix.com www.facebook.com/104thPhoenix My YouTube Channel
Eagle7907 Posted December 4, 2017 Posted December 4, 2017 Oh wow, very cool. Another good way to implement the cutoff on the warthog throttle if using other throttle for nozzle axis. If you go into the cutoff position it moves the nozzle to braking position? I didn’t notice that command in the controls. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro Win 10, AMD FX9590/water cooled, 32GB RAM, 250GB SSD system, 1TB SSD (DCS installed), 2TB HD, Warthog HOTAS, MFG rudders, Track IR 5, LG Ultrawide, Logitech Speakers w/sub, Fans, Case, cell phone, wallet, keys.....printer
MrDieing Posted December 4, 2017 Author Posted December 4, 2017 ;3312696']Its a working feature at the moment mate. Look at the bottom of your throttle quadrant, you ll see a little black lever down the bottom that you can move and set to any nozzle position so you wont select past that. I am aware, I was referring to the Hover Stop and Braking Stop physical knobs, sorry for the inconveniene ''Greed is a bottomless pit which exhausts the person in an endless effort to satisfy the need without ever reaching satisfaction.'' Erich Fromm
mvsgas Posted December 6, 2017 Posted December 6, 2017 I am aware, I was referring to the Hover Stop and Braking Stop physical knobs, sorry for the inconveniene It would be hard to implement. You have to press a key or use the mouse. I have enough trouble not crashing on this flight regime, imagine if they add another step? :joystick: To whom it may concern, I am an idiot, unfortunately for the world, I have a internet connection and a fondness for beer....apologies for that. Thank you for you patience. Many people don't want the truth, they want constant reassurance that whatever misconception/fallacies they believe in are true..
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