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#1
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Hi,
I have created a Condor Tips document for new Condor Competition Soaring Flight Simulator users. It is available he http://www.cumulus-soaring.com/condor.htm Let me know if you experienced Condor users have any corrections or additions for the document. I'm relatively new to the software. Good Soaring, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. http://www.cumulus-soaring.com |
#2
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On May 5, 10:12 pm, "Paul Remde" wrote:
Hi, I have created a Condor Tips document for new Condor Competition Soaring Flight Simulator users. It is available hehttp://www.cumulus-soaring.com/condor.htm Let me know if you experienced Condor users have any corrections or additions for the document. I'm relatively new to the software. Good Soaring, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc.http://www.cumulus-soaring.com Not bad for a first shot at making tips, Paul! Good stuff - Condor has taken awhile to get popular here in the USA but the Europeans have embraced it and I'm excited about more of us in America taking advantage of all it has to offer! One suggestion: In your tips document, mention to people that Condor shouldn't be too tough to fly. If the controls seem too sensitive or are "off", they should check the "Input" configuration tab and adjust the sensitivity of the joystick axes. Take care, --Noel |
#3
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Hi Noel,
Good point. I've been playing with the sensitivity a bit myself. I'm curious how you have yours set. Paul Remde "noel.wade" wrote in message ... On May 5, 10:12 pm, "Paul Remde" wrote: Hi, I have created a Condor Tips document for new Condor Competition Soaring Flight Simulator users. It is available hehttp://www.cumulus-soaring.com/condor.htm Let me know if you experienced Condor users have any corrections or additions for the document. I'm relatively new to the software. Good Soaring, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc.http://www.cumulus-soaring.com Not bad for a first shot at making tips, Paul! Good stuff - Condor has taken awhile to get popular here in the USA but the Europeans have embraced it and I'm excited about more of us in America taking advantage of all it has to offer! One suggestion: In your tips document, mention to people that Condor shouldn't be too tough to fly. If the controls seem too sensitive or are "off", they should check the "Input" configuration tab and adjust the sensitivity of the joystick axes. Take care, --Noel |
#4
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On May 6, 5:06 am, "Paul Remde" wrote:
Hi Noel, Good point. I've been playing with the sensitivity a bit myself. I'm curious how you have yours set. Paul Remde I wish there was some magical setting; but every joystick is a little different. :-/ The biggest "universal" thing I've found is that the CH Pro Pedals tend to be very sensitive, so with them I tend to lower the sensitivity slider down to only a couple of notches above the minimum to prevent yawing the nose way too much. Oh, one other thing to mention in the Tips document: If the screen seems jittery or the glider seems to respond in a stuttering or jerky manner, you need to lower the graphics settings to get better performance. Enjoy! --Noel |
#5
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Hi Noel,
Thanks for the tips! Can you clarify the comment below. What do you mean by "lower the graphics settings"? Paul Remde "noel.wade" wrote in message ... On May 6, 5:06 am, "Paul Remde" wrote: Hi Noel, Good point. I've been playing with the sensitivity a bit myself. I'm curious how you have yours set. Paul Remde I wish there was some magical setting; but every joystick is a little different. :-/ The biggest "universal" thing I've found is that the CH Pro Pedals tend to be very sensitive, so with them I tend to lower the sensitivity slider down to only a couple of notches above the minimum to prevent yawing the nose way too much. Oh, one other thing to mention in the Tips document: If the screen seems jittery or the glider seems to respond in a stuttering or jerky manner, you need to lower the graphics settings to get better performance. Enjoy! --Noel |
#6
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Condor soaring is GREAT. If you can't really get up in the air, then
CONDOR is the next best thing. I tried unsuccessfully to get condor to participate at the Memphis convention, and to get a on-line competition going at the contest...but most people had no idea what I was talking about. At this years convention in New Mexico, I talked a little bit to Noel, about trying to set up an American on-line soaring simulator contest again....especially now that CONDOR is making more headway here in America. I contacted the creators of Condor in Slovenia, and they were VERY receptive about helping those of us interested in America. So, everyone get their winter soaring simulator software and joysticks in place....it's a great way to fly when earth-bound! Micki Minner |
#7
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OK---I'll ask---
What joystick is recommended for Condor. My Gravis Eliminator was not very good with a large dead spot in the middle. I took it apart to see if I could improve it---made it worse. Saitek, Logitech, and Microsoft all seem to have good ones on paper at least. Favorites? -- Hartley Falbaum "MickiMinner" wrote in message ... Condor soaring is GREAT. If you can't really get up in the air, then CONDOR is the next best thing. I tried unsuccessfully to get condor to participate at the Memphis convention, and to get a on-line competition going at the contest...but most people had no idea what I was talking about. At this years convention in New Mexico, I talked a little bit to Noel, about trying to set up an American on-line soaring simulator contest again....especially now that CONDOR is making more headway here in America. I contacted the creators of Condor in Slovenia, and they were VERY receptive about helping those of us interested in America. So, everyone get their winter soaring simulator software and joysticks in place....it's a great way to fly when earth-bound! Micki Minner |
#8
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Video cards are generally limited by computational power and data transfer
bandwidth. (bus speed) Hi Paul You can generally improve the smoothness of display by increasing the frame rate - and hence perceived quality. Way to do this is to reduce the computational task by lowering the display resolution (of what condor renders, not the screen) The task of rendering a screen is a geometric function of three resolution parameters. Since the number of pixels to calculate is a function of horisontal resolution X vertical resolution a modest drop in resolution dramatically reduces the number of calculations required per frame. Often better is to lower the colour depth. Many LCD screens have limited colour gamut anyway - so the default 32bit per pixel colour depth is largely wasted. Dropping to 24 or 16 bits per pixel does not particularly reduce colour perception, but it can substantially reduce the data transfer requirement. (and the calculation complexity) Go back to the higher setting for your photos... So setting 1024x768x24 is faster than 1024x768x32 is faster than 1280x1024x32 etc. In general a video card with dedicated video RAM and decent OpenX support is all that is required for Condor. If you have shared RAM - try to limit the data throughput to increase frame rate till it is smooth. Cheers Bruce Paul Remde wrote: Hi Noel, Thanks for the tips! Can you clarify the comment below. What do you mean by "lower the graphics settings"? Paul Remde "noel.wade" wrote in message ... On May 6, 5:06 am, "Paul Remde" wrote: Hi Noel, Good point. I've been playing with the sensitivity a bit myself. I'm curious how you have yours set. Paul Remde I wish there was some magical setting; but every joystick is a little different. :-/ The biggest "universal" thing I've found is that the CH Pro Pedals tend to be very sensitive, so with them I tend to lower the sensitivity slider down to only a couple of notches above the minimum to prevent yawing the nose way too much. Oh, one other thing to mention in the Tips document: If the screen seems jittery or the glider seems to respond in a stuttering or jerky manner, you need to lower the graphics settings to get better performance. Enjoy! --Noel |
#9
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Hi Hartley,
I currently use a 10 year old Microsoft Sidewinder II joystick. It is OK but I don't think they are available as new any more. I was curious to see how a force feedback joystick would work so I just ordered the one found he http://www.amazon.com/Saitek-Cyborg-...624 89&sr=8-1 I look forward to having increased pressure at high speed. I don't know if it will be worth the money but I just had to find out. It should arrive in a day or 2. I'll let you know what I think of it. Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. http://www.cumulus-soaring.com "HL Falbaum" wrote in message . .. OK---I'll ask--- What joystick is recommended for Condor. My Gravis Eliminator was not very good with a large dead spot in the middle. I took it apart to see if I could improve it---made it worse. Saitek, Logitech, and Microsoft all seem to have good ones on paper at least. Favorites? -- Hartley Falbaum "MickiMinner" wrote in message ... Condor soaring is GREAT. If you can't really get up in the air, then CONDOR is the next best thing. I tried unsuccessfully to get condor to participate at the Memphis convention, and to get a on-line competition going at the contest...but most people had no idea what I was talking about. At this years convention in New Mexico, I talked a little bit to Noel, about trying to set up an American on-line soaring simulator contest again....especially now that CONDOR is making more headway here in America. I contacted the creators of Condor in Slovenia, and they were VERY receptive about helping those of us interested in America. So, everyone get their winter soaring simulator software and joysticks in place....it's a great way to fly when earth-bound! Micki Minner |
#10
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Bruce -
Your advice is generally good; but those rules of thumb are changing as graphics cards have evolved over the last few years. Screen Resolution and Color Depth affect graphics performance mostly when the graphics card doesn't have much memory (such as with cheaper PCs that have "Integrated" graphics chips or "Shared memory"). Furthermore, most of today's LCD screens are actually designed to work at 1 optimum resolution. Using lower resolutions will cause the screen to look blurry or blocky (in Windows and other 2d applications, not just during 3d rendering). The geometric complexity of a scene (i.e. the number of three dimensional shapes in view) is more critical to performance with today's modern 3d graphics cards. So the first thing to do is to try to lower the amount of trees and objects being rendered. Also lowering the visibility (drawing distance) or lowering the terrain or texture detail can help. "High End" smoothing (such as anti-aliasing or anisotropic filtering) can also add a big slow-down and should be disabled if the computer isn't performing well. Most of these display/graphics options are visible from within the Condor settings / configuration screens. Take care, --Noel (Former computer-game developer) :-) |
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