Vista64'te Momo direksiyonla MostWanted oyununda sorun yaşıyorum; sanki yukarı tuşuna sürekli basılıymış gibi oluyor oyun menülerinde, birşeyi seçmeniz imkansız hale geliyor... Oyunda da bu sebepten dolayı otomatik olarak sürekli gaza basılmış halde araba kendisi gidiyor... Klavye ve mausu çıkardım ama fayda etmedi...
Logitech'in sitesinde yayınladığı lws_clrc isimli registryi temizleyen programı indirdim, bu da fayda etmedi...
I haven't try this yet, so don't blame me if you get your Vista messed up... Backup your registy before modifying it.
Copied from rscnet forum: ********** 1. Go to registry editor (Start button and then click the "run" button; in the small window type: "regedit" (without quotes), press enter; the registry editor appears)
2. Use the 'directory tree' on the left side and go to this directory: HKEY_CURRENT_USER>System>CurrentControlSet>Control>MediaProperties>PrivateProperties>Joystick>OEM
3. Under this directory delete all the entries that start with "VID_" (without quotes).
4. Reconnect the USB device to another USB port (just to be safe); Vista should recognize the wheel ...
5. That's it. Go play RBR!
2. Açıklama: I had the same scrolling menu problem. After trying in vain for over an hour, I went to an older XP notebook I have and found the Logitech settings that worked there and applied those settings to my Vista PC and got things working.
Your results may vary but this is what worked for me:
Open the Logitech Profiler. Click Options, Global Profiler Settings and check "Apply profiles to games automatically", "Switch selected device to ID 1" and "Scan for new games on startup". Click OK. Now click Options, Global Device Settings and check "Report Combined Pedals". I don't have "Enable Centering Spring in Force Feedback Games" or "Allow Game To Adjust Settings" checked but don't think they matter in this case. Click OK.
(I realize that not all of these are needed but I'm lazy so don't want to spend the time figuring out which exact setting makes this work.)
Now EXIT Logitech Profiler. Exit completely so the program is not running. This is important because I can't get the MOMO wheel to work in NFSMW when the Profiler is active.
Open NFSMW, go to Options, Controls and ensure MOMO is the selected controller at the top of the screen (keyboard is the default.) With MOMO set as the controller, set Accelerate by highlighting the Accelerate field and pressing Enter or clicking on the Accelerate field. At the prompt to "Press a button to re-map this function", press the MOMO accelerator foot pedal. Now following the same re-map process above, set Brake/Reverse using the MOMO brake foot pedal. When completed you should see "Combined Pedals" as the Accelerate and Brake/Reverse settings.
I had this problem under XP and Vista on multiple PCs and this fix always resolved the problem.
So you don't have to remove all registry keys (like I wrote yesterday), but only these 3 mentioned below.
My Hardware IDs were same as TopJimmys, USB\VID_046D&PID_CA03, and I took backup before I removed any registry keys. Also, I re-installed LGS software after I removed registry keys and LGS didn't find Momo at all. Reboot was needed and then everything worked just fine. So I guess that between 4) and 5) you should reboot. Thanks to TopJimmy for solution. =)
I also quickly tried NFS Pro Street, and force feedback seems to work there also, which it didn't before. =)
Solution copied from TopJimmy's post: ************ Okay Grover, thank you, calibration was the ticket! After some registry research and about 30 minutes of playing around, I came up with a repeatable solution which worked for me, and no utility required:
1) Determine hardware ID of the device by going to: Device Manager --> Human Interface Devices Right-click Logitech MOMO Racing USB and click Properties Click on the Details tab Under the Property dropdown, select Hardware Ids Under Value you will see the hardware IDs, for me I see: USB\VID_046D&PID_CA03&REV_0019 USB\VID_046D&PID_CA03
2) Unplug the wheel's USB connector from the computer. 3) Uninstall the LGS software. 4) Delete the following registry keys which correspond with the hardware ID found in step 1: