Assetto Corsa Competizione and Simucube 2

It’s actually only FFB. “Optimizations” would be a strong word, it’s very simple really, 100% dynamic damper, the rest at 0 and gain to match the power of the motor.

I’m finding the default True Drive ACC preset massively overfiltered though, I’ll talk to Mika about adding another one.

I know I’m biased and all, but the wheel feels beautiful in ACC, every nuance can be felt perfectly.

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yep, agree on that, that’s why I’m now using the profile I posted above, with just a little friction filter and direct input damping, it feels absolutely glorious with those settings.

Noted. That default ACC profile was made when the ACC was still very early in early access last year, and we haven’t touched it since. However, the whole profile management system is getting an overhaul, and I’m unsure if we are going to add more template profiles yet.

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For reference, here is my TD profile, in the end the reconstruction filter is what I’ve been using mostly, had it at 3 for a while but settled at 5 as this is where it’s completely buzz-free even on high-caster setups.
The ingame profile was set up with these settings (even though it’s really not different from the OSW Argon preset at all apart from the adjusted gain level, like I mentioned earlier on these forums, there is no wheel-specific code in ACC apart from the respective manufacturers’ SDKs).

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Does ACC use DI Friction Effect?

For buzz, try Ultra Low Latency at 5%, you might be able to drop Recon back to 3.

I believe the only DI effect AC/ACC uses is the DI damping but only when the car is stationary.

I thought that too, I was just asking because your screenshot also had Friction DI set to 0.
Thanks for confirmation.
ACC FFB and physics are a pure bliss btw, really make SC2 shine, your team should be very proud.

:love_you_gesture:

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Hi guys,

I’m new to this. Please, help me if possible. I tried many of the settings you guys suggest here, but with high torque enabled, the wheel is too heavy. What can I do? Should I play without high torque? I have a SC2 Pro. Thank you!

Yes, play with high torque enabled, but lower the force, overall strenght in True Drive or in game(or both) after own liking. Try 50% as a start in TD.
I dont play ACC myself but in many games there is a FFB meter that shows possible FFB clipping, and u dont want that.

Example on this setup, 63% in TD and 90% in game,

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It’s pretty much universally recommended to leave Road Effects at 0% for DD wheels, but I was quite amazed by how much more alive FFB become after dialing in as little at 10%, esp on GT4 cars.
Can’t stop smiling driving KTM now.
FFB doesn’t have to be boring and clinical. :v:

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I’ve been adding road effects a little - and I think it helps with the sense of speed.

For sure it adds to the enjoyment.

So for some reason certain GT4 cars has very little to no feel in the steering? (ex. Mercedes, Aston)

Other cars like the KTM, Ginetta, Alpine I have no issues with.

Hello, has ACC’s default profile been edited or is it still the same as at the beginning? What settings do you currently have after the update? I have a Simucube 2 Sport. Thank you.

look at pankypapus post here above

Thanks. And the ingame settings?

dynamic damping 100%, no road effects and gain as you like

Just use SC2 profile and adjust Gain and Road Effect to your liking.

Thank you guys :blush:. I tried it.

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New SC2 pro owner here.
Thanks for the settings; set them but started with:

  • reconstruction filter at minimum “fast”
  • torque bandwidth limited at unlimited
  • all the fine tuning stuff at zero.
  • 900 deg.

As for in game, set

  • gain at 13
  • dynamic damping still unsettled if zero or 100 is better.
  • Rest of the stuff at zero.

No idea if this is the best but i hope this is a good baseline to start from.

Any thoughts guys on what to focus on/adjust next?

Would suggest you copy the settings from above from pankykapus

I added a few % of damping and inertia on top. Change one at a time and see how you like it.

The main thing is probably to stop messing with settings and get used to what the wheel is telling you — every time you change a setting you’re changing that feedback loop. Just get on and enjoy driving it.

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