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Relatar um problema com a tradução
http://www.chproducts.com/Consumer-Products-v13-p-124.html#5
Here a pic of my old profile for the A10C... http://i.imgur.com/He2Lq.png
You need to make a set up like that and a printed out document or a picture on a laptop / second monitor will go a long way to help in the beginning.
That way you have everything on your joystick, see my post above for reference how that might look. All the normal HOTAS functions plus some extra like landing gear, push2talk, center TrackIR. :)
With more expensive joysticks you get more POV-Hats, switch buttons etc. so that you don't need to use as many modifiers to use all the functions of a complex aircraft like the A-10C.
When you got heavy hands, if you know what I mean, I can certainly see you get in trouble with the X52 though and break it. It is something you have to consider before buying the X52 for like 100 dollar/euro. It is a very precise stick but there isn't a lot of resistance. I think many people for this fact alone don't like it, but I personally think its a good stick for its price.
Firstly, in P51, the force feedback helps you to feel when the plane is about to stall, which is a big help when trying to squeeze as much as possible out of it in a dogfight. In helicopters the forcefeedback simulates the forcetrimming of the aircraft. Basically, to have the helicopter fly forwards you need to hold the nose below the horizon, which involves holding the stick in the forward position. In a long mission this makes your arm hurt! The forcetrim basically let's you set the stick so that instead of returning to center it returns to the forward possition, which is much more comfortable and makes for more stable flying.
For the A-10, force feedback is less important, and you would benefit more from having plenty of buttons and hat switches to control the vast number of aircraft systems. That said, I am flying the A-10 with my MS SW FFB2 stick and am very happy doing so.
Is the X55 out yet? It looks interesting..
- Thrustmaster T.16000
Medium:
- Saitek X52
Advanced:
- Saitek X55
- Thrustmaster Warthog
Expert level:
- Custom build / real replicas and advanced gear (really an open end here up to building a complete copy of a cockpit of your choice)
The rest you can just forget about. CH products was nice in the past - but these days you want HALL sensors and not potentiometers. The only thing I would recommend from them is the rudder pedals (if you like the fact that they are really slim)
Personally I have a TM Warthog but also a T.16000 and often I find myself just grabbing the T.16000 since it's much easier to handle unless you place all your gear in a dedicated sim pit.
3D works fine, for a 30€ joystick, but be prepared to set up modifiers and write down all the important keybinds/combos. I had this huge list of keybinds and whatnot written down to remember what does what.. xD
@Madfish,
From what i've seen, people who build custom pits still use Warthog hotas just because the quality of the joystick is OUTSTANDING.
As for the last paragraph, you don't need to build all custom pit for the hog hotas. You can use speaker stands if you want, it's just the height that matters. I kept mine on my PC table for a while before doing some ghetto fixes and got them about 10cm lower.
I started with the xbox 360 controller, it was terrible IMHO, at least a cheap joystick is needed IMHO. The Logitech extreme 3d models are always fine, pretty universal.