Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => Aces High General Discussion => Topic started by: Anaxogoras on December 17, 2008, 06:14:17 PM
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Has anyone practiced using a mouse or trackball for views in combination with f8? It would be like Track-Ir with your hand instead of your head. I tried it offline, and though it's awkward at first, it seems possible to master. As a bonus you can easily look down at your instruments in aircraft where they are difficult to see, as I don't think many of us have the down-view mapped to our sticks (up-view instead, of course).
As an afterthought, anyone with a separate throttle control unit might find this experiment a little tricky. :lol
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The lack of replies says it all, no one has a bloody clue. :rofl
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Has anyone practiced using a mouse or trackball for views in combination with f8? It would be like Track-Ir with your hand instead of your head. I tried it offline, and though it's awkward at first, it seems possible to master. As a bonus you can easily look down at your instruments in aircraft where they are difficult to see, as I don't think many of us have the down-view mapped to our sticks (up-view instead, of course).
As an afterthought, anyone with a separate throttle control unit might find this experiment a little tricky. :lol
Hi,
i use track ir pro, because i tried different views before. during the fight i check the pulled g-forces meter sometimes. There is nothing like trackir to do this. So tell santa you need a trackir pro
:)
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I have the mouse emulating nub and button on my Saitek X52 throttle mapped as a mouse, and mouselook toggle. I don't use F8 ingame really, with the mouselook function negating the need to pan around with the keyboard, or remap the mouse. Map the mouse in AH, all the other views in the Saitek Profiler, and you're all set. I've got the 8 standard views on a stick hat, combo'd with "look up +" via a shift button, and the head position adjustments on the other, with one button returning me to interior, looking forward, default zoom, snap, etc courtesy of a simple macro. I can look at gauges, scooch around on the seat, stare at the floor, etc, without taking my hands off the controls. This makes it possible to achieve new levels of disorientation while flying that just aren't possible with conventional controls.
I have some of the F buttons mapped to the stick, but I don't find their placement convenient, and as such don't use them. Mouselook ftw.