- #Ucr – universal control remapper drivers#
- #Ucr – universal control remapper driver#
- #Ucr – universal control remapper full#
#Ucr – universal control remapper driver#
Not sure if it's something that's unique to my computer or built, but it is very annoying as my head tracking solution relies on PS3 Eye with the driver from, which occasionally decides to put the camera on a holiday and it disappears from the list of camera devices visible to any program.
#Ucr – universal control remapper drivers#
Hope this proves to be helpful, and saves someone the six-plus hours of googling, installing, experimentation, and reading documentation that I did!ĬH Control Manager is a very powerful tool, but I've been having weird issues with the CH drivers themselves.Įssentially, when the CH Control Manager (and the drivers associated with it) is installed, any attempt to install, re-install, or update any other USB device drivers will result in a bluescreen that traces back to the CHDRVR.sys as the culprit. While I'm using this for a Cobra and a CH Throttle Pro, it will also work for any other two-USB-port setup, such as a Saitek X-55, or any mixed-brand combination. UCR is itself built on another of the guy's projects, AHK-CHID - a rewrite of AutoHotKey's joystick support that is in-progress.Īnd here's UCR, which I am in the process of teaching my setup. But since it's built on an enhanced AutoHotKey base, you can actually have some of the physical inputs trigger macros, instead of additional virtual buttons - so you could have some of your buttons/hats instead carry out a sequence of commands, like for using the communications menu, or something.
#Ucr – universal control remapper full#
It's still a little glitchy, lacking a few features, and the UI needs work, but it allows for the full utilisation of vJoy's virtual interface! So that's up to eight axes, a hundred twenty-eight buttons, and four hats! Which sounds like more than you'll ever need, and probably is, but I was surprised to find that when I counted my shift button and the three-way mode switch, my HOTAS can go up to seven axes and a hundred and eighty combined button and hat inputs! So there's still a limit. And then I found an in-progress project by the guy who made UJR, U CR, Universal Control Remapper. So I would have had my throttle's axis and the ministick, but only three of the buttons, leaving sixteen inputs unutilised. AutoHotKey wasn't seeing those four hats on my throttle at all. My CH Throttle Pro alone has four hats and three buttons, or nineteen buttons if you don't count the hats as hats!.
![ucr – universal control remapper ucr – universal control remapper](https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/G1sAAOSwOjBhWlqM/s-l1600.jpg)
Which is more than you need for any joystick I can think of, but once you start combining it with a throttle, you can run into problems. So UJR only allows for thirty-two buttons and one hat. Figured "okay, let's try this." Unfortunately, while vJoy allows for the maximum amount of buttons and hats that a Windows machine can handle, UJR is limited by AutoHotKey's joystick interface, which it is built on. So I googled, and I searched the forum, and I found recommendations for vJoy and UJR (Universal Joystick Remapper). Then I updated my FSO install, as it had languished for the year I've been without a HOTAS, and tried to play - only to run into the problem that it only recognised one of my two devices. I got back from picking up my throttle, plugged 'em in, fired up Elite Dangerous and puttered around for a bit. I was going to go for a full CH setup for ease of playing older games, but assumed that there would be tools that would allow me to do so with a mixed-brand setup (I.
![ucr – universal control remapper ucr – universal control remapper](http://vjoystick.sourceforge.net/site/images/sampledata/vJoy/Joystick-icon.png)
I recently replaced my old broken x52 Pro with a Defender Cobra M5 and a CH Throttle Pro. The FreeSpace Universe Reference Project.