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Pitch "jerks"

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved PA-28R Arrow III
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  • C Offline
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    CGNoorloos
    replied to RetiredMan93231 on last edited by CGNoorloos
    #81

    @retiredman93231 I get there is turbulence and that there are different weights. But watch that last video of the Turbo Arrow i linked in its full duration please. Sorry but that is not how it should behave. It is not being tossed up/down, it is changing pitch in like a blink, there is no feel of weight transfer either. Had that flown like that IRL it would be rather bad for both plane and occupants.

    Note that this has been since i bought the planes. This is not new after SU9, but it has increased.

    Edit: Also here, again watch the Turbo from 0:35 and 01:40. Don't tell me that is realistic motion.

    Stock 152:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ms8Gxhv-v_A

    Turbo Arrow
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DTl7Y-fPSfE

    Edit 2:
    This is what Turbulence looks like, not there it not even a hint of that jittery pitch behavior like what happens in MFS.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hjwE20T9p3A

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    RetiredMan93231R Offline
    RetiredMan93231
    replied to CGNoorloos on last edited by
    #82

    @cgnoorloos I recommend trying a comparison flight between the Turbo Arrow III and the Bonanza G36, which are more similar in size, configuration and weight.

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    CGNoorloos
    replied to RetiredMan93231 on last edited by
    #83

    @retiredman93231 I have flown the Bonanza, that one doesn't do it either. Did you even watch that Turbo Arrow clip i linked?
    Please stop downplaying this as a "This is how it should be", because it is not. You cannot tell me you fly with that and think it is fine. If you do not have an issue with it kudos for you but i do and i need it fixed.

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    SebAvi
    replied to CGNoorloos on last edited by
    #84

    @cgnoorloos of course you are right, from day one Arrow had problems with this. The last plane update made it much better. Unfortunately, as it was mentioned earlier, the changes to the thermals in FS SU9 are so strong that the Warrior currently performs the best from the Piper's family.

    I fly quite a lot in RL and of course there are thermal and wear effects, but not to the extreme extent as it is after the SU9 update. Currently, I suggest you set the weather for either early morning or late evening. Only at these times is it possible to somehow fly.

    On average, developers at this stage can do anything before the Asobo patch to improve the thermals. A new flight model has been introduced in the SU9 that developers could also consider introducing into the Arrow line in near future.

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    CGNoorloos
    replied to SebAvi on last edited by
    #85

    @sebastianr Sure they can do something? Since the Arrow 3 has much less then the Turbo version. I hope the prop model will help.
    But i cannot understand that this is not a more reported issue. Specialy the Turbo can be a lot more jittery then the last one i linked, and a whole lot. Will try and capture that when it happens.

    I have been looking at the Warrior 2 for some time, but i don't dare to drop 45euro on that and maybe have the same issue.

    I just hope it gets fixed, it is frustrating like hell. Not just for the money spent, but when they work they are simply well and above any other GA i own. They are just fabulous when not jittering around.

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    ajbarber
    replied to CGNoorloos on last edited by
    #86

    The way the arrow jumps around in zero time feels like how they used to film car scenes in old movies with a screen behind the car prop. It just doesn't look realistic and breaks the immersion.
    https://youtu.be/RO88NI16g84?t=36

    The pitching moment on the turbo arrow also seems super sensitive. The slightest change in power seems to cause a pretty instant change in pitch and I find a stabilized approach is much harder than the 172. I don't know if that is what it is like IRL.

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    ajbarber
    replied to ajbarber on last edited by
    #87

    I'll also point out that you can see the difference with the same plane in Xplane 11 which does not exhibit this behavior from what I have seen.

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    Delta558 Developer
    wrote on last edited by
    #88

    Comparing this to other sims is absolutely pointless - different teams, different sim environment, there are bound to be differences even when we work from the same documentation!

    Okay, a quick update for all - I noticed while using the force debugger in the sim that there is a near-constant switching between up and down force on the tailplane. It's in phase with all the videos posted, I think it may be the cause (or at least a part) of the problem. I have been looking at the new CFD entries and the fairly new prop physics. The latter without the former is probably pointless and the former is a WiP, but I thought I'd at least make a start. Curiously, the up/down force is magnified massively and gives a wild swing from about 30 degrees nose up to 30 degrees nose down. Only really starts over 100kts, but then gets very aggressive rather quickly.

    It's going to take some time to work this out, I can reproduce it with a warbird at a higher speed (but again, well below that aircraft's max speed) so there is definitely something odd going on.

    Just Flight FDE developer

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    CGNoorloos
    replied to Delta558 on last edited by
    #89

    @delta558 Thanks again.
    I have not double checked this a 100% but if i am not mistaken, when at rhoughly the same speeds, the Turbo does it more agressive then the Arrow 3

    Not sure if this shows it okey as YT makes the video a bit slow. They both go to around 140kts IAS
    Turbo
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GLyvzcX21D4
    Regular
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wWAs6xsZ8oY

    Btw something i noticed is that those pitch changes don't really alter the vertical speed a lot. Like sometimes when flying over a mountain the nose may doa single "jerk" up or down like 5-15 degrees and stay there and the VSI needle will hardly move. I learned to just try and ignore the visual pitch change when flying, else i would over correct for nothing.
    So it seems to often be mostly a visual thing outside of normal turbulence bumps ofc, those will push the VSI up or down as expected. I will try and make a video of this that hopefully can show this way better then i can explain in text :P

    Thanks again for looking into this, it is highly apreciated.

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    ajbarber
    replied to Delta558 on last edited by
    #90

    @delta558 That's great that you have a lead to follow up on! Thanks so much for looking into it, I look forward to your findings.

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    pdd
    wrote on last edited by
    #91

    I have the exact same issue with both the Arrow and Turbo Arrow. @Martyn when can we expect an update fixing things for the pipers? It's been 3 months with no support for these products.

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    Delta558 Developer
    replied to pdd on last edited by
    #92

    @pdd Read my post just a couple before yours. Here's a link to a video showing the effect in the forces debugger: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1zXAvh6_mAiM3qNuK_stESPIBfOA36uQn/view?usp=sharing

    That's gone to Asobo to see if they have any idea what is going on, as there is nothing which I can see that would cause such an effect. Two things to remember: 1) This game's flight model is NOT based in fundamental aerodynamics. It is a mixture of some aerodynamics, some shape-based and some attempts to fix problems caused by the first two. It does not make sense aerodynamically, nor in many respects in terms of geometry. 2) I asked a question directly regarding jet engines back in November on the support forum set up specifically for Devs to get answers to problems. That has still not been answered 6 months later along with several others but it leaves us totally guessing what to do.

    When we have to start guessing, you may as well all join in because that's how daft this game's flight model has become - no info, very little support for Devs and it does not make sense on its own. Sorry about that, hopefully we'll hear back from them but until that point we really are stuck with a situation we find unreasonable ourselves.

    Just Flight FDE developer

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    pdd
    replied to Delta558 on last edited by
    #93

    @delta558 How come this doesn't happen to other aircraft addons? Clearly something is wrong with the Arrow, no matter how terrible the aerodynamics of MSFS is, as you say.

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    Delta558 Developer
    replied to pdd on last edited by Delta558
    #94

    @pdd I have no idea. Getting answers about anything aerodynamic from Asobo is virtually impossible. Very sorry about that, but that's how it has been since the game was released (and bear in mind that the Arrow was one of the first addon aircraft released). The information is just not there, which is probably why several flight dynamics developers of many years standing are no longer developing. We don't like having to guess.

    Put it this way, the geometry is correct. We do not have even a basic list of which aerodynamic coefficients are still 'actively having an effect', so they are all filled out with correct figures. It should work. Yet removing one of the coefficients known to no longer be used causes the game to crash. It has to be there, but it apparently doesn't work. It's still filled out correctly, what else is there I can do? They should be able to look at that video and see what is happening with their force debugger - let's just hope that they can work out what the cause is, because I can't and neither can anybody else who has looked at this with me.

    Without some decent support from Asobo specifically for Flight Dynamics, we're all guessing.

    Just Flight FDE developer

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  • D Offline
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    Delta558 Developer
    replied to Delta558 on last edited by
    #95

    Also worth noting that this doesn't happen with other aircraft I have developed for the sim, so it's not 'the way I develop'. If it was, we'd be seeing it in the other aircraft and might be able to narrow it down. This is PA28-specific.

    Just Flight FDE developer

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    Sender46
    replied to Delta558 on last edited by Sender46
    #96

    @delta558 said in Pitch "jerks":

    Also worth noting that this doesn't happen with other aircraft I have developed for the sim, so it's not 'the way I develop'. If it was, we'd be seeing it in the other aircraft and might be able to narrow it down. This is PA28-specific.

    Strange that the fact that it's in the PA-28 but not in other aircraft doesn't help you narrow it down.

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    Delta558 Developer
    replied to Sender46 on last edited by Delta558
    #97

    @sender46 So you'd think, but I have not altered my developing style between the aircraft I have built for this game. Always accurate geometry, then accurate coefficients, then start looking in the game for key characteristics and tweak from there. It's pretty much how I've been doing it for the last 15 or so years through FSX, P3D and even briefly in X-Plane. I have thePA28 accurately defined, as I have the other aircraft accurately defined (as far as this game will allow). Why it is doing what it's doing is, as far as I can see, not a geometry issue, nor is it a coefficients issue.

    However, there are many areas of the flight model which (as I have said above) bear no resemblance to either accurate geometry or aerodynamics:

    Example 1) Each control surface is defined by its area, its deflection angle and the coefficent of motion which is the effect of its deflection. Simple. This game has added in a 'maxangle scalar' for each one, something which exists nowhere but this game. If the two geometry aspects and coefficient are accurate, why would you need a scalar of any sort? If the effect is too much or not enough, adjustment of the coefficient should suffice. There should be no need for a 'maxangle scalar', so what is it? It has finally been loosely defined in the latest SDK, direct and complete quote:

    Scales the deflection angle of the rudder control surface up to the max deflection indicated in rudder_limit and already scaled by the elevator_elasticity_table.
    The default value is 1, and if the limit angles are matching the real aircraft, this scalar should be less than 1 as the effective deflection will be aligned with the overall vtail and rudder chord. A value between 0.5 and 0.75 will work with most airplanes.

    The first sentence, to me, suggests that it is a scalar on a scalar - deflection of the rudder which has already been scaled by 'elasticity' (used since previous versions of FS to control the aerodynamic pressure associated with increased speed, compressability). So why the need to scale it further? What is the actual effect? Then the second sentence suggests that it is related to an "effective deflection" (? a control surface either deflects or does not) The vertical tail / rudder chord is a misdirection as, if everything is set up correctly, all 'scalars' should be =1, which would allow the data for other inputs to stand. But above all that, this is an entirely new entry and the definition of it is NOT clear enough. It simply does not make sense on any level.

    Example 2) This one may be simple or may not, depending on if you have our Hawk. Look at the fuselage side-on. It is purely a geometry issue, and this game claims to be very much based in accurate geometry:
    The new flight model for Microsoft Flight Simulator relies on the shape of the aircraft to predict its aerodynamic behavior and we have almost entirely dropped the use of tables of data. Because of this, the correct definition of the aircraft's dimension data is of particularly importance.

    Direct quote again from the SDK there. Yet the ability to define the 'shape' is not there - we have length, diameter and centre position. No allowance for any fuselage that is not an almost-perfect cylinder. No allowance for area rule, nothing for the intake bumps, nor the high canopy. In the game, all you can define is a cylinder and the Hawk is outside that in so many areas but not consistently. It's also far inside that in other areas. Basically, if the game is reading the shape, then the shape is wrong so whatever flying characteristics depend on that are screwed.
    In previous sims, we had full ability to adjust. If something wasn't right in the sim's calculations, we tweaked the coefficients and did not have limits artificially imposed. We were able to see what we were doing, refer to either the SDK or works on Aerodynamic theory (Roskam's are rather good!) and find a way to build the aircraft as correctly as possible.

    In MSFS, that ability has been taken away - the game has far too much control and we are very limited in what we are building. If we come across an issue because of the way the game has interpreted the files, our hands are tied - I am currently working on the PA38 Tomahawk and a rated pilot has commented on the flap behaviour: The aircraft's reaction should be a ballooning effect with a distinct pitch nose-down. The aircraft and flaps are defined correctly. The aircraft pitches nose-up. So I went to the coefficients and reversed the polarity of the entry for flap pitch, it still pitches nose-up. So I went to the aircraft editor, there's a section under [Flaps] which allows for aft movement of the CoL on flap deployment. Unfortunately, it actually gives forward movement of the CoL and any attempt to introduce negative numbers automatically rewrites it all to zero, so any adjustment of this exacerbates the nose-up tendency.

    I have prided myself on accuracy within the constraints of the various sims prior to MSFS, this is a game and I don't think I am going to waste too much more time on it really because it has too much control without allowing the flight dynamics guy to adjust and derives everything from base aircraft (such as the C172). That's not appropriate for so many different types! ACES had a solid base in aerodynamic theory and it worked, but the environment around it was stifled. This game is a brilliant world and environment, but flight is based on "here's a problem, let's fix it with a random scalar"

    Just Flight FDE developer

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    Sender46
    replied to Delta558 on last edited by
    #98

    @delta558 Thanks for the detailed explanation. I can see why it's so frustrating.

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  • A Offline
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    ajbarber
    replied to Delta558 on last edited by
    #99

    In looking at the behavior it almost seems like a rounding or float to integer conversion where some precision is lost and is noticeable when transitioning between positive and negative. But who knows. So frustrating that Asobo won't help trouble shoot a really popular add-on plane. Is there a way where we can help by contacting Asobo ourselves?

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  • M Offline
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    mgr
    wrote on last edited by mgr
    #100

    Found a "tip" some time ago on the official forum, which seems to "work".

    The source of the jerks seems to caused by these entries in the flightmodel.cfg:

    aileron_up_drag_coef = 0.2
    aileron_down_drag_coef = 3.9

    Simply comment these out and the jerks are gone.

    ;aileron_up_drag_coef = 0.2
    ;aileron_down_drag_coef = 3.9

    Probably not a scientific way yet it seems to works.

    Any thoughts on this?

    Marcel

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