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On Feb 13, 10:41 pm, "John R. Copeland"
wrote: wrote in ooglegroups.com... Hi All, I'm a longtime lurker here, but now I have a question I hope the group can help me with. I am working toward my instrument rating (21 hours so far), and want to use MSFS to practice (cheaply). I do fine with holding a heading, but I find it very difficult to maintain an altitude. The real plane is much much easier. I also noticed that even when the scenery flies by smoothly (when I'm in VMC!) the instruments seem to update at a slower rate. Not quite a slide show, but harder than it should be to control. I've tried fiddling with the realism and sensitivity settings to no avail. I have noticed a number of folks posting on this group use this simulator to maintain proficiency, and I was just wondering how you have it set up. FYI...I'm using the CH products USB Flight Sim yolk, and the CH USB rudder pedals. The computer seems plenty fast enough with a 256MB graphics card. Like I mentioned before, everything is very smooth except for the instruments refreshing. Thanks everyone! Steve Perhaps you're focusing on the wrong factors there, Steve. Any training value of hobby-type simulators lies in practicing procedures, and not in merely learning to control that simulated airplane. Procedures-training is much more than just a video game. Concentrate more on the procedures, less on the simulator. As others said here, you'll have to accept imperfect simulation. That said, though, it's smart to keep the simulated speeds and times generally similar to those of the airplane you fly in real life. You want those procedures to become comfortable habit patterns, so they don't demand your undue attention as other things turn to worms. After 21 IFR hours, I'm sure you know by now what that means. :-) I was trying to use the simulator as both a procedures trainer, and to help me with my scan and ability to precisely control an airplane by reference to instruments alone. And yes I know all about things turning into worms! My biggest issue right now is that when (in a real airplane) I'm only focusing on the instruments, things go very well. When I have to look up a procedure or find an intersection and take my attention away from the instruments: that's when the worms can come out of the ground! Thanks for your time. |
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