Surely it wouldn't need to be as tall as it is - our FOV is less vertically than it is horizontally. I mean who really needs a display that starts at their feet? Cool though.
I'm using 85 with a normal 19" monitor. Maybe I'll try my 32" tv sometime for this...but I would need to set up some kind of racing frame for it... I guess I could do with much smaller FOV as I use the look buttons extensively
The best I saw was a link to a site where you could get 3, 4, 5, and I think even 6 flat panel monitors mounted together. Anyone know about it? I can't remember what it was called and I've lost the link on a windows reinstall. It was either in the LFS section of RSC or the do-it-yourself controller section. Man, I wish I still had that link.
I enjoyed reading all your posts about the FOV since I myself tend to spend more time on twisting and tweaking than racing (am I illepall?). However, getting that driving feeling is important.
As for me, I use a position pretty close to the instrumentation/windshield (positive Y offset) to get a good feel of the road and the cars ahead (yes, usually I'm left behind :razz. To find the optimal FOV, I approached the configuration process in a few steps:
1. I do not want my display to represent the (close to) 180 degrees that you actually see. Rather, I want to diplay what my eyes and brain is focused on while driving. This means a pretty narrow FOV. P406_FORWARD.jpg LFS_FORWARD_1.jpg
2. I need to 'feel' the road as well as be able to judge distances as I am used to in a car. This means, I do not want to see deformed graphics as my brain is not really used to interpret distances in such an environment. I achieved this by increasing the Y-offset and raising Z slightly.
3. I want rear control by a glance in the in-car rear view mirror, but have to turn my head for the left rear view mirror and obviously loose focus on the road. I found this to add a little to the realism making it more difficult. LFS_FORWARD_2.jpg P406_LEFT_MIRROR.jpg LFS_LEFT_MIRROR.jpg
For me, changing the FOV to my personal liking elevated LFS to even higher grounds(roads).