September 6, 20223 yr Author I just realized something about my guide, this sensitivity optimizes for precision, but lacks tracking. Take your current sens from this guide, divide that by 1/2... The new cm/360 will be a 50/50 tracking /percision sens. dynamically changing to what you need most. Feels 100x better!
September 6, 20223 yr 20 minutes ago, Chrometastic said: Take your current sens from this guide, divide that by 1/2... You mean divide by 2?
September 28, 20223 yr Author So, I found out there is such a thing called a "Goinometer." This is a device that measures accuratly the degrees of movement for a given joint. I can finally measure out without doing guesswork the exact degrees of movment I can perform for radial deviation for the wrist. I'm recieving mines tommorow at 10pm. I can update my final CM/360, and never need to do any more measurements! Link for Goinometer: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK558985/ Link for amazon page: https://www.amazon.com/Goniometer-inch-360-Degree-Plastic/dp/B07ZCVJXVD/ref=sr_1_6?keywords=Goniometer&qid=1664407353&qu=eyJxc2MiOiI0LjQwIiwicXNhIjoiNC4zMSIsInFzcCI6IjQuMjkifQ%3D%3D&sr=8-6 Using one for Radial Deviation of the wrist:
September 30, 20223 yr Author Yay, I have finally with the assistance of the goinometer, measured the degrees of the ROM and lenth for radial devination of my wrist, this can be used to pinpoint cm/360 for percision sens. I take the cm/360, and divide it by two, to make for 50/50 cm/360, no more deduction and guess work anymore! Now, final steps toward perfection is ergonomics, as well as maintaining the new 50/50 cm/360 speed and applying it to all my scopes for consistent gameplay! } PERCISION SENS: 5.97339 CM/360 @ 25,600 DPI 50/50 FINAL SENS: 2.986695 CM/360 @ 25,600 DPI Edited September 30, 20223 yr by Chrometastic
October 31, 20241 yr Author With further discovery with this method as of recent, I found 2 things: 1. My measurement for my Radius for the calculator was not accurate. With your hands facing towards you and not the back of the hand facing towards you, follow the middle finger to the base of your wrist and then you follow the thumb like the diagram below, you will find a indent/valley/dip in your wrist where the base of your measurement should start, the next point is where the tip of the middle finger is, this will indicate your radius.... This helps when you calculate your radius. 2. Turns out I was measuring my ROM for Radial Deviation causing strain at peak movement of wrist instead of measuring usable ROM for daily activities... I did some research and after an scholarly article later, I spotted this and simplified the sentence below: "17 degrees of radial deviation reflects the maximum wrist motion required for daily activities" This got accounted for in the calculation and resulted in a final sens which had improved my sens drastically. I practically never need to pick up my mouse for actions. I never feel strained on my sens. I aim so much more comfortably and accurately. Final sens for me based on my hand size is:
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