LesGawlik
Line Up and Wait
- Joined
- May 6, 2006
- Messages
- 975
- Display Name
Display name:
Good Guy
I recently decided to upgrade my sim game. I bought MS 2020, but never installed it. I used X-Plane11 in the past, and gave that a second go.
I replaced my aging laptop with a new Asus recommended for gaming. That allowed me to see texture and scenery. That's not too important, since I zoom in to the 6 pack to practice instruments. I use simming to practice on the planes I fly. I have no interest in flying the Space Shuttle on a computer.
I have G5s, and I bought the add ons for those. So far so good.
I went out on a limb and bought the Honeycomb yoke and throttle quadrant. Initial impression was, Wow. Beautifully crafted, and heavy as can be. You can set it up with 0-6 sliders, covering up to a twin with throttles, props and mixtures.
Then reality hit. I had to set this monster up to work with X-Plane. I was ready to give up. There are so many buttons and switches, it was tedious. But putting it back in boxes was more work than figuring the configuration out. And I am back to loving it now. The motion of the yoke and the feel of the throttle quadrant is excellent. The trim wheel is extremely smooth and realistically effective. There are rubber covers to blanked off unused sliders. I even have the autopilot set up like my friend's plane we may be taking to Oshkosh later.
This set up is, to me, just as realistic and the motion Redbird I was in. I know, can't log it, but really so what? It's great for proficiency.
I replaced my aging laptop with a new Asus recommended for gaming. That allowed me to see texture and scenery. That's not too important, since I zoom in to the 6 pack to practice instruments. I use simming to practice on the planes I fly. I have no interest in flying the Space Shuttle on a computer.
I have G5s, and I bought the add ons for those. So far so good.
I went out on a limb and bought the Honeycomb yoke and throttle quadrant. Initial impression was, Wow. Beautifully crafted, and heavy as can be. You can set it up with 0-6 sliders, covering up to a twin with throttles, props and mixtures.
Then reality hit. I had to set this monster up to work with X-Plane. I was ready to give up. There are so many buttons and switches, it was tedious. But putting it back in boxes was more work than figuring the configuration out. And I am back to loving it now. The motion of the yoke and the feel of the throttle quadrant is excellent. The trim wheel is extremely smooth and realistically effective. There are rubber covers to blanked off unused sliders. I even have the autopilot set up like my friend's plane we may be taking to Oshkosh later.
This set up is, to me, just as realistic and the motion Redbird I was in. I know, can't log it, but really so what? It's great for proficiency.