I don't know if you reviewed this in the debrief, but if I had to guess you were firing the rockets around 400-900 FT above the ground. A good rule of thumb is 27 ft per hPa or 2.7 ft per 0.1 hPa. ( about 1000 ft per 1 inHg or 100 per 0.1 inhg and 10 per 0.01 inhg) Setting the QFE on the ground then using it as reference to set the altimeter to the target elevation is the way I usually do it, I also have no idea if the Temperature actually effects the altimeter readout in dcs but that's in extreme temperatures so it shouldn't be an issue.
I realize I should clarify: we aren't that new, just that bad lmao I spend most of my hours in DCS just flying the M2000C low and fast to decompress after work
What aircraft is that, and did it come default with that GPS unit on the dash? That's really useful and I thought there was a way for different aircraft to have a gps unit in the cockpit
Good stuff man, best dcs experience is with friends lol
Highly agree!
Stay tuned if you like this kind of thing. We have big plans going forward to explore the social aspects of these milsim types of games.
I don't know if you reviewed this in the debrief, but if I had to guess you were firing the rockets around 400-900 FT above the ground. A good rule of thumb is 27 ft per hPa or 2.7 ft per 0.1 hPa. ( about 1000 ft per 1 inHg or 100 per 0.1 inhg and 10 per 0.01 inhg)
Setting the QFE on the ground then using it as reference to set the altimeter to the target elevation is the way I usually do it, I also have no idea if the Temperature actually effects the altimeter readout in dcs but that's in extreme temperatures so it shouldn't be an issue.
Flying in VR and knowing about Open Kneeboard combined with beeing a newbie is a very odd combination :)
I realize I should clarify:
we aren't that new, just that bad lmao
I spend most of my hours in DCS just flying the M2000C low and fast to decompress after work
What aircraft is that, and did it come default with that GPS unit on the dash? That's really useful and I thought there was a way for different aircraft to have a gps unit in the cockpit
It's the C-101CC Aviojet with the NS430 addon.
Unfortunately, you have to buy the GPS module AND the integration into the Aviojet separately
@@TCann285 I bought the gps Garmin module thing but learned the hard way it doesn't work in VR, at least not that I've been able to make work.
@@SilentWolf486 You have to get the integration that I'm referring to.
It's only available for the C-101, L-39, Mi-8, and Gazelle.
@@TCann285 gotcha, thanks for the info. I'm mainly a P51 driver now, but it would definitely be useful to have.
Jester is my best friend