I'm not familiar with your type of Tx, but if you can change the model type to "airplane", do it! Try this first! My logic is that CV is an airplane sim with helis thrown in! I noticed fussing with my DX7s, something was conflicting with CV. Any suggestions for a better sim without spending my heli money all on a sim? Is it even worth it? I now see a lot of stuff saying what crap this sim is. Once I get the proper cable what next? Looks like I have to go and assign a switch, for each function, what about the cyclics? One end is usb the other looks like the end for a monitor. Clearview emailed a link to a page that shows a lot of cables for this purpose, however non of them say Devo.
I am a newcomer to all this so can somebody please tell me what kind of cable I need to hook my Tx to pc and get the sim to respond? I have usb to mini usb and that does nothing. I have downloaded the clearview sim and want to use my Devo 8s and 10 to fly helis. I'm a heli guy, and like that Phoenix uses the actual pitch curves from my DX8, while Clearview requires you to edit the params.txt file every time you change your xmitter setup.Īnd that's not likely to change, since Clearview hadn't been updated in over a year. Personally, I gave up on Clearview, once I shelled out for Phoenix. But there really is no documentation on what, does what in that file. To change your model's behavior, edit the params.txt file in the directory for your particular model. Or you may need to do a LOT of tweaking to get your model to match reality. You may get lucky, and find a perfect match. So as Wintr said, your mileage will vary, depending on who did the original parameter files, and how active the users of that particular model are. Of the two flight sims I own, both Clearview and Phoenix have models that seem perfect, and others that seem really 'floaty'. I don't want the plane to be fast at all, I was just wondering if the experience is close to the real stuff.