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Channel Delay on X9D Plus SE???

Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2022 4:04 pm
by OSUengineer
Hello,

I am very new to Open TX and currently have a Taranis X9D Plus SE with the factory open TX firmware on it. What I am trying to do is precisely control the time it takes for the throttle to get from 0 to 100. I think FlySky has a similar feature called "channel delay".

Basically I want to punch the throttle stick to 100 and have it programmed to go from 0 to 100 over a chosen length of time. Currently I am manually "feathering" the throttle to achieve the desired result.

Is there a way to do this on this radio, and if so please dumb it down as much possible because I am very new to this firmware, transmitter, and just programming/mixing in general.

Any help is greatly appreciated!

Re: Channel Delay on X9D Plus SE???

Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2022 4:30 pm
by rdeanchurch
If the O is for Oregon I may be able to help, if its Oklahoma or Ohio...its iffy. ;-)

There is a slow function that does what I think you want. It is in the Mixes.
Easiest to show in Companion.

Re: Channel Delay on X9D Plus SE???

Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2022 7:31 pm
by OSUengineer
rdeanchurch wrote: Fri Nov 11, 2022 4:30 pm If the O is for Oregon I may be able to help, if its Oklahoma or Ohio...its iffy. ;-)

There is a slow function that does what I think you want. It is in the Mixes.
Easiest to show in Companion.
Ohio State - though I can get on board with Oregon :)

This seems to be what I am after. Apologies for the total newbie question here but is this accessible directly through the transmitter menus (I don't have it in front of me at the moment), or must I download this OpenTX companion?

Appreciate your help!

Re: Channel Delay on X9D Plus SE???

Posted: Fri Nov 11, 2022 7:45 pm
by rdeanchurch
It is available on the Tx.
You will probably have to scroll down on the Mix page aways and the label might be pretty cryptic.
I just couldn't point you to where as I do 99.72% of the setup on Companion.
Everything you can do in Companion can be done on the Tx in my experience.
The reverse isn't quite true. Close though.

Math major, not an engineer until coders morphed to software engineers.