September 3, 201510 yr I agree with Karsten. I have the 4690K, and have been able to bump it up to 4.3ghz stable. As I was working with stability, I tested the NGX at each level (The NGX is the only reason I've built this system) A higher cpu clock rate seems to have a major impact for higher frames and smoother operation. clive6354, on 23 Aug 2015 - 2:57 PM, said:Thanks for the helpWhen setting the trim on the 737NGX does it have to be set exact e.g 4.6 compared to 4.8. How do you set .6 or .8, guess work? Is there digital trim reading for this aircraft. I do use a digital trim guage when using Level D 767 In the simulator's options, make sure to leave "Cockpit Tooltips" on. With this option, hovering over the trim wheel will give you the digital read that you want. I usually go about .5 over what the FMC recommends. It seems to give a perfect attitude after gear up. John Anderson Windows 10, FSX:SE I5 4690k GA-Z97M-DS3H EVGA GTX 950, 2GB
September 3, 201510 yr Commercial Member In the simulator's options, make sure to leave "Cockpit Tooltips" on. With this option, hovering over the trim wheel will give you the digital read that you want.I usually go about .5 over what the FMC recommends. It seems to give a perfect attitude after gear up. Just eyeball it - I can't hover my hand over the trim wheel in any of the planes I fly and have it magically pop up a number telling me what it is. Kyle Rodgers
September 3, 201510 yr But, you guys have us that option, Kyle. John Anderson Windows 10, FSX:SE I5 4690k GA-Z97M-DS3H EVGA GTX 950, 2GB
September 3, 201510 yr Commercial Member But, you guys have us that option, Kyle. Microsoft did, yeah, though I guess we kinda tapped into it. I see where you're going, but it's a study sim, which most people want to utilize in a realistic manner. Most just don't think it through enough to realize "oh yeah, tooltips aren't in the real thing either...guess I should just eyeball it." Plus, when you think about it, the FMC is giving you a value in "false perfection." In other words, it's giving you that value on the assumption the CG value you gave it is accurate, but that CG could be very off, since the CG is calculated using an assumed passenger weight. Here in the US, weight varies widely. Heck, just look at the difference between your typical early morning business flight to your later evening flight to MCO. That being said, your CG is going to be an estimate (close, but still an estimate), which means that the resultant trim value (coming from an estimate) is going to have error in it. Set it close and adjust as necessary when airborne. Kyle Rodgers
September 3, 201510 yr Set it close and adjust as necessary when airborne. Here's a difference between a sim-only pilot and a pilot. When hand-flying, you are flying the trim so the trim starting point is a minor issue since you'll be tweaking as soon as you're airborne. Kyle is suggesting that there are major issues and minor issues, learn the difference and don't sweat the minor issues. The worst thing that can happen is more or less elevator input for rotation as long as you are close. Dan Downs KCRP
September 3, 201510 yr It took me months to get rid of the (bad) habit of setting the trim to second digit using the tool tip... Now I set the trim with the mouse cursor off the trim wheel. I think the problem in flying only in sim is that if something is available (like the tool tip for the trim value) it must be absolutely used and complyed to the letter, forgetting that in real life it is not (as already said in previous posts in that thread). Despite the fact it couldn't be called "empiric" either, flying is not a perfect and exact science. Of course, procedures have to be complied with and correct figures have to be used, but it requires the pilot to have a sense of flying. which is some case kind of supplant the theory of flight. Romain Roux Avec l'avion, nous avons inventé la ligne droite. St Exupéry, Terre des hommes.
September 3, 201510 yr Commercial Member I think the problem in flying only in sim is that if something is available (like the tool tip for the trim value) it must be absolutely used and complyed to the letter, forgetting that in real life it is not (as already said in previous posts in that thread). Yeah, this ended up "getting" me when I was training for my private pilot certificate. I think I may have used the story once or twice here, but just in case: In the sim, I'd use the 'B' key to snag the local altimeter. I got so used to doing this that when I was on my long solo cross country, my thought process literally went *hey, I should update my altimeter setting - just hit the...'B'...key...that isn't here...how do I? Oh! Right! Tune into ROA's ATIS...* Seriously. Needless to say, that was the end of my simulator shortcut keys (with some exceptions like view switching and so on). Kyle Rodgers
September 3, 201510 yr *hey, I should update my altimeter setting - just hit the...'B'...key...that isn't here...how do I? Oh! Right! Tune into ROA's ATIS...* I don't understand why they persist in not installingthe "B key" in the cockpit of the aircrafts... :wink: Regarding ATIS, until PMDG came with addons that accurately model the radio system, I used to look at the Active sky window to read the METAR when flying online instead of switching to the frequency not to leave the ATC frequency while under control on IVAO. Now I can listen to both frequencies at the same time in both the NGX and T7 thanks to PMDG. I wonder what I would have done in real flight with that habit. Oh I need the ATIS for the weather at destination airport... where is the Active sky window? Romain Roux Avec l'avion, nous avons inventé la ligne droite. St Exupéry, Terre des hommes.
September 3, 201510 yr Commercial Member I wonder what I would have done in real flight with that habit. Oh I need the ATIS for the weather at destination airport... where is the Active sky window? Honestly, I get some of that even in the real world, too. If you ever fly a G1000 aircraft, you get really used to being able to snag a lot of information right from the MFD (the airport database contains all the airport frequencies and so on). The next time I flew a non-G1000 aircraft, I floundered a bit before realizing I needed to but out the iPad and get the info from ForeFlight. Interesting the odd habits you can pick up here and there... Kyle Rodgers
September 8, 201510 yr Thanks for the help When setting the trim on the 737NGX does it have to be set exact e.g 4.6 compared to 4.8. How do you set .6 or .8, guess work? Is there digital trim reading for this aircraft. I do use a digital trim guage when using Level D 767 The trim figure is calculated and set by the FMC. You can change it if you wish with the mouse in virtual cockpit mode - just right/left click over the trim wheel and see the trim wheel move. Click over the readout area and you will see the setting as digits (tool tip style) Len Carne
September 8, 201510 yr Set it close and adjust as necessary when airborne You're right, Kyle.I never really thought about it like that. Brings back memories of my FI smacking the back of my head telling me to get my eyes out of the cockpit. John Anderson Windows 10, FSX:SE I5 4690k GA-Z97M-DS3H EVGA GTX 950, 2GB
September 8, 201510 yr Commercial Member You're right, Kyle. I never really thought about it like that. Brings back memories of my FI smacking the back of my head telling me to get my eyes out of the cockpit. haha - yep. Mine did the same thing (well, flicked my shoulder and called the deviation - altitude, speed, "eyes out," etc.). Kyle Rodgers
September 8, 201510 yr Mine threats me to cover the gauges with cartons if I don't stop looking at them! "Why do you think there is a windshied in the cockpit?!" Romain Roux Avec l'avion, nous avons inventé la ligne droite. St Exupéry, Terre des hommes.
September 9, 201510 yr "Why do you think there is a windshied in the cockpit?!" Pretty much what mine said... my first solo flight and the horizon tumbled in the crosswind turn so I landed and pointed out the equipment failure to my instructor on the ground. He sent me off packing and I actually had to use the real horizon... good lesson for an 8 hr pilot. Dan Downs KCRP
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