[quote=meditek]Hi all,
I just got my 5 today along with the Trackclip pro. It's all working great in Aces High and I haven't been sick yet!
Anyway, as a newbie with this thing, could someone tell me how to adjust the field of view (e.g. turn head 2" for 180 degrees) without increasing the rotation speed. I presume it has something to do with adjusting the curves? However, I haven't managed it! In other words, I want full 180 degree views adjusted to a comfortable (for me) degrees/sec.
Thanks [/quote]
If you want to be able to have
more in-game movement with
less real head movement, you'll have to increase your rotation speed. They go hand and hand.
However, you can achieve this (more effectively, in fact) without touching the "speed" slider in the basic settings section. You're correct in assuming this is done with the motion curves.
The Default Profile should allow you to look left and right (Yaw axis) around +/- 180 degrees rather comfortably. If you want to be able to do so with even
less head movement ("make it faster!"), you'll want to increase the Y values on the curve. (I'd recommend only adjusting Yaw, and perhaps Pitch, from the default profile for starters. It's really the key axis to fine tune initially.)
In the default profile, the third control point is around 4.5 on Y value. Try bumping it up to around 6. The 4, 5, and 6 control points are around 6 on the Y value. Try bumping them to around 7.5. The net result should give you
more in game movement on the Yaw axis (nodding "no") with
less physical head movement required.
If you want to go the other way ("slow it down!"), you can move those same points to about 3 and 4.5 respectively for the Y value.
This same process can be applied to each axis, if you wish to edit them all. The relative values will be different, as most people want some axes (like roll for instance) to be quite mellow, while others (like yaw) are more aggressive.
The simple, broad approach is to adjust the speed slider. It simply multiplies all values on all axes of a profile by X amount. This is helpful for quick, small changes. An significant increase or decrease in desired "speed" is best handled with the motion curves.
Hope this is what you're looking for!
-Seth