Hi Paul,scalawag wrote:Big N00b wrote:Sorry, wasn't clear enough - what I meant was to indicate what (if anything) needed to be done to the transmitter before running the configurator - did you clear any previous setting, do nothing, do a couple switch setups, that kind of thing.scalawag wrote:I am glad this is so helpful for people.![]()
This thread is intended as a review of the board which is why I have not gone into any detail of radio set up. I would like to keep this as a review, but what I will do when it is finished is adapt the content and add to it to make it into a how to PDF file which could then be downloaded from the Forum.
In the meantime if there is anything specific to my set up which you would like to ask about please do.
Paul
It would be helpful to know that the Configurator doesn't care 100% what you did/didn't do, it will set the board as you run it or....
That make sense?
Hi Big N00b,
On the radio you just need to clear any limits and or mixes which are set. Then make sure that each switch/control on the radio you intend to use has its own channel set. It does not mater which channel it is set to just that it has a channel of its own. The board will take care of the rest.
On the 9x series of radios which is what I use this can all be done by setting up a new model, and assigning the controls a channel each in the mixer. Additional controls can be assigned to switches by adding lines in the mixer for the functions which are assigned to the stick diagonals. I can cover this in a new thread if people are interested.
I have very little or no experience with other radios, so I am not really able to speak accurately about set up. As long as the limits are normal and there are no programmed settings you should all be fine. You just need a nice clean setup with each control assigned its own channel and the configurator takes care of the rest.
I hope this helps
Paul
I think your first two para's are perfect for what I think would be in that Addendum I was thinking of, along with other member's experience on different Tx's.
In the end, your guide pretty much handles all the nuts and bolts of a user guide, a little bit more than a quick start and a little bit less than the detailed IBU guide, all of which comprise a great component of the IBU3 experience.
All of this is just my 2 cents of course.
Thanks again for what you've done here.
Regards,
Terry