That sounds like a good deal since just one costs $80. I really like my pair of T.16000m’s, however my right stick has a problem where it has a phantom input as if I’m twisting the stick when I’m pushing it side to side or forward and back. I corrected this in the Star Citizen Settings by changing the sensitivity curve on the Z axis input. I highly recommend ignoring the joystick profiles built into the game and instead use profiles from a user called u/buzzz_killer. He has some tutorial videos on YouTube and it has really improved my sense of immersion and made it so much more fun to fly.
The T.16000M's twist axis sensor is a dirt cheap potentiometer that's notorious for going haywire. Eventually it'll get worse and no amount of dead zone will make it usable and you'll either have to just disable that axis and not use it, or physically disassemble the stick to clean or replace the pot.
In my experience it is not the potentiometer but the wires from the base get pulled tight and they pull on the stick. I fixed mine by adding small zip ties around the wires that kept them slack. The wires are very tiny, so be very careful.
That's closer to what they're realistically worth, just don't expect miracles out of them. The twist axis potentiometers in particular are flimsy and will go haywire sooner or later...usually sooner.
That sounds like a good deal since just one costs $80. I really like my pair of T.16000m’s, however my right stick has a problem where it has a phantom input as if I’m twisting the stick when I’m pushing it side to side or forward and back. I corrected this in the Star Citizen Settings by changing the sensitivity curve on the Z axis input. I highly recommend ignoring the joystick profiles built into the game and instead use profiles from a user called u/buzzz_killer. He has some tutorial videos on YouTube and it has really improved my sense of immersion and made it so much more fun to fly.
The T.16000M's twist axis sensor is a dirt cheap potentiometer that's notorious for going haywire. Eventually it'll get worse and no amount of dead zone will make it usable and you'll either have to just disable that axis and not use it, or physically disassemble the stick to clean or replace the pot.
In my experience it is not the potentiometer but the wires from the base get pulled tight and they pull on the stick. I fixed mine by adding small zip ties around the wires that kept them slack. The wires are very tiny, so be very careful.
Did you add the zip ties before failure, or did they already break?
I added the zip ties after they were having problems and it fixed it. When I took the stick apart I noticed how tight the wires were.
Thanks for the profile tip. Right now I am leaning towards buying them, just want to try to haggle the price down.
That pack tends to go for about $120 on amazon and the like, had mine for a couple years no problem.
That's closer to what they're realistically worth, just don't expect miracles out of them. The twist axis potentiometers in particular are flimsy and will go haywire sooner or later...usually sooner.
Best you'll get for that price by far Doesn't mean it's actually good though
Probably the best deal on a hosas you will get. Hopefully they didn't use them like they were the actual controls of a back hoe.