have had this issue for awhile, when driving straight the wheel wants to seasaw left and right and doesnt stop in the center (like a real car would), i have to hold the wheel pretty firm to stop it from happening, its super annoying
it does it in both LFS and iracing tho it is alot worse in iracing because i run stronger FFB in it
Have you ever actually driven a car from the '80s or early '90s? Or a modern sports car for that matter? Your love for Fanatec will fade very quickly once you do
QFT
the seasawing is because your ffb is too high. as Bose said, change the settings in the windows config (logitech profiler) to 101-103%. everything else should be set to 0%. then in LFS use , and . to higher or lower the ffb whilst driving. my LFS ffb is 20%-30%
Well that's hardly realistic, not even modern small cars with stupidly light power steering (Fiat's CITY mode anyone?) steer that lightly.
100% in LFS, 100/0/0/0 720° or 900° in Profiler 5.08 (no linearity issues) is still not enough for my taste and I'm not that strong. I don't mean to provoke an argument or a debate of any kind, I'll just say that it's a percentage for a reason and even at 100%, no consumer wheel can even remotely reproduce the feedback you get from a real car, especially when you hit the kerb.
the settings i use are the most commonly used within the LFS community( except the rotation). i've used these settings on several wheels since 2004. i have never had a problem. i just don't want to brake my wrists when i hit a rumble strip. iirc, there was a problem with ffb within windows. setting it above 100% (101-103) meant that you got better ffb.
when i put the ffb up full on both wheel and lfs, my wheel used to seasaw even when parked.
You have to tick enable centering spring but set the centering spring force to 0. In some (rare) cases it would see saw when parked but normally wouldn't...maybe 1/20 times it would see-saw.
How do you know?
Good for you, but that doesn't mean you utilised the full potential of your wheel(s)'s hardware or LFS's FFB capabilities.
Understandable, I wouldn't entrust a piece of hardware I didn't design, controlled by a piece of software I didn't write, running on a machine made of components I didn't design (...) with the ability to cause physical injury to my body either, but your average consumer wheel is far from that.
The "above 100%" thing was a work-around around the linearity issues in earlier profiler versions, it's counter-productive as of 5.08 (or 5.04, don't know when they fixed it).
http://en.lfsmanual.net/wiki/W ... tting_up_a_Logitech_Wheel i think this is updated by LFS users. unless it's wrong. i don't use the logitech profiler. the settings i have are the settings i use in every game. and they work perfectly fine with no tweaking needed.