Everything posted by kowgli
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FSX Crashes every time - Replaced Graphics card
Is your machine OC'd? Did you try to run any load testing tools like Prime95 of Intel Burn Test? Did you test in other demanding games?
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Need help with the cpu
I would for now park the MB and CPU upgrade and just buy a new graphics card in your case. I would recommend the new GTX770 (maybe Palit Jetstream). It has very good value for money. Performs similar to the old GTX680 with less power consumption.
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Need help with the cpu
If you have your 2500 OC'd to 4.7GHz it's doubtful you'll have any significant performance improvement by upgrading. The 3xxx and 4xxxx generations are maybe 10-15% faster when comparing clock vs clock to 2xxx. They are more energy efficient, but that's basically it.They are also not so good at overclocking, so 4.5GHz is a reasonable limit. Basically you won't gain anything. If you need to upgrade I would consider the graphics card. The GTX570 is now 2 generations old and the GTX770 is roughly 50% faster. But off course if you use the computer only for FSX the graphic card doesn't matter so much - it matters but GTX570 is more than enough. Summing up I wouldn't upgrade yet in your situation. You have a very powerful setup and there is not much you can gain by upgrading. If you have an urge to spend money (like I have sometimes ) then I would spend it on some nice hardware controller - like a professional yoke or something.
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overclocked to 4.8 = FSX crash
Well you didn't provide any information regarding your settings - voltages, frequencies, multipliers, RAM settings etc. So it's hard to give any specific advice. I suppose If you managed to get it to 4.6 you know the general idea of overclocking. Basic advice if it's crashing is to bump the voltage a little (like 0.05V) and prime test for at least 30 minutes. If it fails bump it a little more, until it passes the test. Remember it's not just the CPU voltage that matters. RAM voltage and VTT (memory controller) are also important. In the end run a prime test for a couple of hours to be 100% sure everything is OK.
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overclocked to 4.8 = FSX crash
Did you test your stablity using software like Prime95 - http://www.mersenne.org/freesoft/, direct link http://download.mersenne.ca/gimps/p95v279.win64.zip Try running the blend test for at least 30 minutes and see if there are no errors. If there are - you have your answer. As Jim mentioned it's even highly doubtful the 4.6GHz is stable. I'll start by lowering the multiplier to 42x and play around with the CPU and VTT voltages until it's "prime stable" for at least 30 minutes. System boot is no indication of stability. Only putting it under high pressure (like Prime95 does) is. It's fairly common for an OC'd system to run perfectly under normal working conditions (office application, browsing, etc.) but crashing when under heavy load like playing games. Only tedious, using small steps, overclocking and load testing will give stability. It's also important to realistically lower your expectations and not compromise stability over performance improvement. Hope I helped, Łukasz
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Saitek trim wheel as rudder trim ?
Hi, Cannot confirm this 100%, but I think it's not possible. The reason is that in FS the aileron and rudder trims are not an axis. So you cannot control them in an analogue way. It's only +/- by a certain increment. Some time ago, when I was developing a touch screen controller for FSX (for my own use) I did extensive research on the subject and coulnd't find a reliable solution. It might be supported by some 3rd party aircraft - but not generically. You'll need to contact the developer and ask. It might be then possible to configure it using FSUIPC.
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inflight map drives me nuts!
Sky Vector is great but only for the US - where it's covered by sectionals. For the rest of the world the level of detail on the map is way to low for proper VFR flight planning. There are no min. sector altitutes, cities are not labeled, only the major roads are shown, obstacles (with height) and landmarks are missing... etc. You can see here what the level of detail is on real aviation charts. I'm not sure how it works in the US, but in Europe the process of planning a cross country VFR flight takes at least an hour. You first draw the route on the map, fill in the legs with magnetic track and distance in your VFR flight plan. Next you check the weather forecast and calculate the wind correction angle and calculate the magnetic heading, ground speed and leg times. All is writen down in a flight plan and on the map next to the legs. You perform your weight, balance and fuel calculations and put them into the flight plan. Finally you check NOTAMS, METAR's and TAF's and active TRA's and TSA's. It's a lot of work, but the preparation phase is half the fun of real world flying.
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inflight map drives me nuts!
In my opinion you should invest, buy a normal paper aeronautical map (sectionals, Jeppesen, ...) and do proper navigational flights. If you fly GA VFR then navigation with a stoper and map is 90% of the fun. Following a line displayed on the screen seems a little boring. I'm not sure how it is in the US, but I assume that similar as in Europe all airfield information, procedures and maps are freely available.
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Project Airbus A380,Aircraft stalls at departure gate
@TheRealThing89 Disable crash detection in FSX. This is a common issue, either because of errors in the airplane model or the scenery.
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FSX Graphical problems (ATI/Win7 x64)
kowgli replied to SBlauw's topic in Video Hardware: Monitors | Multi-Monitors | Video Cards | Drivers etcAMD Phenom II x4 965 is a CPU
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Serious issue with Saitek Pro Flight Rudder Pedals
kowgli replied to armchair_pilot's topic in System Hardware: PC | MOBO | RAM | CPU | HDD | SSD | PSU etcYou mentioned you just bought them. Can't you just request a warranty repair? As a consumer you shouldn't really care about the hardware. Until it has a warranty it has to work.
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Why don't I need to use the pitot heater?
Apparently pitot tube icing is not simulated
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I need your help
First of all try playing around with the settings. There are a lot of topics here describing that. Yours are probably to high and not optimized. If that doesn't help you should overclock your CPU as much as possible - to at least around 4GHz. What FSX cares most about is the CPU clock. A good non stock cooler (like Noctua) might help with that. You have a rather high end motherboard so there should be no problems with that. You could also try upgrading your graphics card to something better. The 550Ti is rather low-end. Maybe a 660Ti or 670 with 2GB of V-RAM. Although I would try with the CPU first. As I already said it's what matters most.
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When do pilots turn on the seatbelt sign when going to land?
You don't have to necessarily be below 250kt when below 10.000ft (or more probably FL100) - although it's a quite common standard, mostly because of noise restrictions, reaction time and possible traffic I suppose. This is always defined in the local air law and may differ from country to country. Check the AIP in the country you fly in. Additional restrictions might apply in the airfield you are landing at and should be described in the STAR. A basic rule of thumb is that you try to land as fast as possible (to free up the airspace) but maintaining speeds that are in operational limits. You have to keep in mind safety, passenger comfort and nowadays fuel economy. Often there are min and max speeds defined for different profiles of landing. The decision is up to the captain and operational procedures of his airline. They might differ from airline to airline. Sometimes the tower might ask you to go a little slower or faster, but you don't have to comply if it's not in safe operational limits of the airplane you are flying. Generally what I want to say is that there are no strict rules about this, it's all about common sense and legal requirements. That's why people fly airplanes not robots.
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Time differences
I would simply unify it into UTC (you should use UTC in aviation) You want to land at 13:00 local (UTC-6) = 13+6 UTC = 19:00 UTC Flight takes 8 hours so you need to take off at 19:00 - 8 = 11:00UTC local KORD (UTC-6) = 11:00 - 6 = 05:00 local
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FSX - Performance, i7?
@zowen11 - from my personal experience I can see that frame rate in FSX is basically 1-1 to CPU frequency. Overclocking a CPU 50% should also increase the frame rate 50%. Off course you'll need to have a reasonable minimum in other hardware but the GTX670 is by far more than enough. It's common knowledge that FSX (and previous versions) have an outdated engine which mostly depends on raw CPU power. From what I just saw in some online reviews the i7 2600K can be OC'd to 4,8GHz with proper cooling. That would mean having 30fps instead of 20 Although in my personal opinion 20fps is good enough for a simulator. @Flyglobespan93 - it probably depends on the shop. If it's a small one with hardware geek employees, than maybe yes. Basically the i5 and i7 CPU overclock with no major problems to 140%-150% of the stock speed if you have a decent cooler and motherboard. There is a lot of online guides to overclocking and if you do it with patience (let's say 100MHz increments), do stress tests and monitor the temperatures there isn't really any chance of something going wrong. You just need to know when to stop (for example when temps after a couple of minutes of 100% load come close to 80C). But of course it's always a risk.
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FSX - Performance, i7?
You'll need to OC you CPU. What FSX cares most about is CPU frequency.
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what is fly by wire?
It's exactly the opposite You tell the aircraft to do something, and the computer translates it into control surface movements which cause the aircraft to do exactly that. For example if you want to roll left, you just move the stick/yoke to the left. The computer will compensate for the lift difference of the wings in that position, so you don't sink into the direction of the lower wing. It might be counter intuitive if you have flown classical planes before, but it's still making the aircraft do exactly what you want, not what physics require.
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what is fly by wire?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly-by-wire In simple words it's having a computer between the controls and control surfaces instead of having them physically connected.
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TrackIR 5 causes shimmering! (?!)
Are you using some extra view engine software like EzDok? I'm guessing that since you mentioned looking around with your middle mouse button. In that case it might actually be related to issues with EzDok. Try disabling it to check if it helps and later follow the guide on setting up EzDok with TrackIR. Might help.
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Does anyone navigate using dead reckoning?
What you refer to is standard VFR navigation. This is actually the way I mostly fly using Carenado C152. A good scenery is a must, as a minimum something like Ultimate Terain X, although photo sceneries improve the experience dramatically. I often fly this way as training before RL flights. I would recommend buying a paper VFR map and doing this as you would do in real life. Jeppesen maps have world wide coverage and should be easily available. Just buy a laminated one so you can draw with "permanent" CD markers and later remove it using nail polish remover. The procedure is quite simple: 1. You decide from which and to which airport you want to fly (could be the same). 2. You plot the route trying to keep in "G" space (so you don't have to send a flight plan) and avoiding all TSA's, TRA's, MRA's etc. Keep in mind altitude restrictions. Try to plot the route (straight lines) using easy recognizable landmarks like distinct lakes, cities, large road or rail intersections etc. Following a larger road, railway or river is always a good idea if possible. Try to make the legs no longer than 15-20 minutes of flight so you don't loose orientation (this will be around 25nm for a C152). 3. Check the wind at your flight altitude and sector. Unfortunately I don't know any international sites for this, but you should be able to find it easily. Each country should have some public aviation meteo service. For example in Poland we have something like this 4. Create a VFR flight plan. As a minumum fill in the top section, frequencies and route. For the route at least fill in the magnetic track and distance (from the map, keeping in mind the magnetic declination) and then calculate wind correction angle, magnetic heading, ground speed and time using an E6B (hundreds found online or for mobile devices). Example. Example. 5. On your legs create check points every ~5 minutes and calculate the time you will get there. Alternatively calculate time for passing easily recognizable spots (large roads, rivers, traversing towns etc.) 5. Go flying. Keep the calculated magnetic heading and reset your stopper every time you reach a navigation point. You should get where you want with no issues. If you keep the legs short enough this will really be quite precise navigation. This is how you fly VFR in real life and at least for me it's much more fun than engaging the autopilot and keeping a GPS track, which at least for me is simply boring. Hope I helped. Łukasz
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No Panel in PA34 200T Seneca II
Try using A and Shift-A to switch views. You could also try raising the camera using Shift-Enter if I remember correctly (I'm using EZdok instead of standard FSX camera). I'm sorry you don't like VC. I on the other hand cannot imagine flying with a 2D panel. It's very 90s style The whole point of Carenado planes is the gorgeous VC. You can almost feel the smell of that 30 year old plane For me this is simply perfect. I am pretty sure you can find a freeware Seneca if you don't care about the looks with similar realism and flight characteristics (in both of which Carenado with a few exceptions isn't so great in).
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No Panel in PA34 200T Seneca II
I am 99% sure almost all Carenado planes (the more recent ones) come without 2D full cockpit panels. There might be some 2D instruments. Why use the 2D panel at all? The virtual cockpit it 100x more immersive. I would advice to buy a TrackIR and have the full experience.
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I use autopilot and I'm legit
In most GA planes if you sit on the left side (as PIC) you actually control the stick with your left hand, and the engine controls with your right hand. Also IMHO using an autopilot in GA planes beats the purpose of flying them. It's not cheating, because modern GA planes are equiped with AP, but for me the purpose of flying GA is to fly the aircraft, not get from point A to B. The avoinics are mostly very simple (compared to airliners), so when using AP there is nothing to do.