August 12, 201114 yr Hey guys, quick question, I have heard FSUIPC can cause some issues with this bird in certain configurations. Is it okay or permitted to have your Rudder Toe Brakes axis programmed and calibrated through FSUIPC, and Thrust Levers as well? I find FSUIPC does a much better job at reducing spikes and stutters with the axis's this way. Thanks guys Angelo Cosma PPL ASEL / IFR Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Field Service Representative (SEA) ZSE ARTCC Intel i7 6700K 4.8Ghz / ASUS ROG Maximus Hero VIII / 16GB DDR4 3200Mhz Ram / EVGA 1080Ti FTW3/ Corsair H110i GTX EVGA 850 Watt Gold / Samsung 850 500gb SSD
August 12, 201114 yr I have mine all calibrated thru FSUIPC and have had no issues. Bit of a drift to the right so may need to recalibrate as all my planes seem to be doing do. John VeldthuisSpecs: ASUS X79-DELUXE | Intel Core i7-5960X Extreme @ 4.2Ghz | Gigabyte GeForce GTX980 | 32GB Ram | Cooler Master HAF 932 case | ASUS PB279Q, 4K UHD, 27" Monitor | Windows 8.1 | Segate 2x2TB 7200rpm drives, SanDisk 2x256GB SSD| Corsair Hydro Series H105, Watercooling kit
August 14, 201114 yr Hey guys, quick question, I have heard FSUIPC can cause some issues with this bird in certain configurations. Is it okay or permitted to have your Rudder Toe Brakes axis programmed and calibrated through FSUIPC, and Thrust Levers as well? I find FSUIPC does a much better job at reducing spikes and stutters with the axis's this way. Thanks guys you can assign it as "Send to FS as normal axis" in FSUIPC and you will still get the built in FSUIPC axis filtering and calibration without bypassing the FS axis, in case the NGX logic needs it that way
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