hreich Posted January 2, 2008 Posted January 2, 2008 Can anybody tell me where in game settings cgf files i can make axis zone of movement of the stick bigger. I read on some forum that it is possible to make stick more sensitive for aerial refuelling-(but not in axis sensitiviy ingame). [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] Pilot from Croatia
Frazer Posted January 2, 2008 Posted January 2, 2008 For aerial refuelling the stick is actually made less sensitive, this is probably done automaticly by increasing the SHIFT of the curve (ingame settings). About axis zone of movement, I don't see any reason to increase that because thats relying on the stick itself (how far the stick can move). With the X52 for example, the movement zone is prettey big. What you can do is making the "arm" of the stick bigger (home build sticks). With other words, the longer your stick is, the preciser you can make inputs. What also will help for a bit more precision is to put the joyrange.cfg (open with wordpad) to: JoyRange = 1024; (best for X52 & X52Pro). Other than that these curve settings will be best for most users. Forum | Videos | DCS:BS Demo1 / Demo2 | YouTube Channel [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]
hreich Posted January 2, 2008 Author Posted January 2, 2008 thx...thats what i was looking for [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] Pilot from Croatia
SoaringEagle74 Posted January 2, 2008 Posted January 2, 2008 For aerial refuelling the stick is actually made less sensitive, this is probably done automaticly by increasing the SHIFT of the curve (ingame settings). About axis zone of movement, I don't see any reason to increase that because thats relying on the stick itself (how far the stick can move). With the X52 for example, the movement zone is prettey big. What you can do is making the "arm" of the stick bigger (home build sticks). With other words, the longer your stick is, the preciser you can make inputs. What also will help for a bit more precision is to put the joyrange.cfg (open with wordpad) to: JoyRange = 1024; (best for X52 & X52Pro). Other than that these curve settings will be best for most users. Just out of curiousity, what does the 'smooth' input field correspond to? It ranges from 0 to max..what is ideal? Also, why JoyRange=1024? Is this value relevant to screen resolution in any way, shape or form? My screen resolution is 1024x768.
Frazer Posted January 2, 2008 Posted January 2, 2008 Just out of curiousity, what does the 'smooth' input field correspond to? It ranges from 0 to max..what is ideal? Also, why JoyRange=1024? Is this value relevant to screen resolution in any way, shape or form? My screen resolution is 1024x768. Smooth does exactly what the word says, it smoothens the inputs. It feels a bit like delays. This can give some confort for certain joysticks, but i don't recommend it. It is better to learn to give precise inputs. Joyrange difference from joystick to joystick. You can test your joystick resolution (the amount of measuring dots per axis) with a certain program I forgot the name of lol, Ill come back on this later. Anyway, smooth at 0 and Joyrange at 1024 will be a good way to go for most joys. Forum | Videos | DCS:BS Demo1 / Demo2 | YouTube Channel [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]
IvanK Posted January 3, 2008 Posted January 3, 2008 Good info, is their a specfic/optimum setting in terms of joyrange= for CH joysticks ?
Frazer Posted January 7, 2008 Posted January 7, 2008 Here is the program i was talking about. www.reservoirs-elite.org/data/promo/diquick.zip Thanks =RvE=--A.S--! Forum | Videos | DCS:BS Demo1 / Demo2 | YouTube Channel [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]
StoOopiD Posted January 2, 2010 Posted January 2, 2010 i have a Logitech Force 3D Pro my joyrange is @ 1 [sIGPIC][/sIGPIC] Crosshair VIII hero wifi, 3800x w/ Enermax 360 AIO cooler (push-pull), 32gigs DDR4 Ripjaws 3600, Win 10 home on a Plextor PCI-E x4 3gb/s HD, EVGA 2070 Super FTW3 ultra+, Soundblaster Z Rift S, M$FFB2, CH Pro throttle, Saitek pedals BS2, A10C, P51D, SPITFIRE, FC3, Uh-1H, F86, Mi-8MTV2, SA342, MIG21-bis, AV8BNA, F14, F16, FA-18C, SUPERCARRIER
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