thrustvector Posted February 2, 2019 Posted February 2, 2019 was really surprised at the difference in her. only had her for about an hour, its so nippy and light, hard not too turn too tight, maybe have to use a axis tune? is that recommended for the gazelle or just get used to it, I don't usually use curves on anything. hovering was easier than I thought, but being so jittery the landings seem the hardest. any way a good and happy purchase to complete my rotor hanger, weird with the duplicate tutorials and wish there were some more for radio usage but I'm sure youtube will sort that.
FragBum Posted February 3, 2019 Posted February 3, 2019 was really surprised at the difference in her. only had her for about an hour, its so nippy and light, hard not too turn too tight, maybe have to use a axis tune? is that recommended for the gazelle or just get used to it, I don't usually use curves on anything. hovering was easier than I thought, but being so jittery the landings seem the hardest. any way a good and happy purchase to complete my rotor hanger, weird with the duplicate tutorials and wish there were some more for radio usage but I'm sure youtube will sort that. Okay see my response in your other Gazelle thread. I know what you mean by jittery landings vid here. :D Although ignore my attempt at flying more important look at the controls indicator and you'll see just how little cyclic input is needed. Maybe crank in some curvature and gradually wind curvature out as you become accustomed to it. Two things I find. The Gazelle is a ton of fun to fly. All the DCS helicopters tend to build on each other as you gain experience. Control is an illusion which usually shatters at the least expected moment. Gazelle Mini-gun version is endorphins with rotors. See above. Currently rolling with a Asus Z390 Prime, 9600K, 32GB RAM, SSD, 2080Ti and Windows 10Pro, Rift CV1. bu0836x and Scratch Built Pedals, Collective and Cyclic.
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