![]() ![]() I think when I first purchased the Cabri from SkyLabs, I think I remember somewhere the suggestion of setting the controls to zero percent. Nevertheless, with the values you suggested the machine felt much better and I was able to land on a building top with some effort but my replay looked good. I have not been flying on the sim for awhile and I am rusty. ![]() The Cabri G2 behaves much more to my liking now. I took your advice and set the controls to zero percent as I understand you are suggesting. Thank you for taking the time and effort for the detailed response. Let me know if you have further questions or need further assistance! If you are making your first steps, this struggle is a natural aspect and it will be amazingly improved as you will gain more practice and experience. Regarding the struggle.I don't have information regarding your experience with flying helicopters (real life and/or X-Plane). Higher values will "feel" more stable, and will in fact reduce the pilot workload, although it is not needed as the VSKYLABS G2 was designed to be flown with both of these on 0%. The stability augmentation is also recommended to be set to 0%. It may induce a situation in which you are chancing the helicopter rather than being on top of things. This travel takes time (even if it is fractions of seconds), and it will result in minor lags between your brain and the actual control (the virtual cyclic in the sim). The reason is that when it is with high values (such as 40%), you have quite of a higher travel of the cyclic for a given input around the center. ![]() Most importantly is the control response bars on the left side, which may increase your pilot workload if it is higher than 0%. For most realism I recommend to set all the bars (control response and stability augmentation) to zero percent (0%). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |