Ijust finished assembling my crossfire pro last night. When ever the X-axis lead nut mount is tight the X-axis binds. It only does it for the most part when jogging at 300 IPM. Does it a small amount at 200 IPM. If I loosen the mount it works flawlessly other than jiggling all around. I inspected the lead nut and it appears to be fine unless I am missing something. Thanks in advance
The X-axis lead nut bracket needs to be properly aligned with the lead screw. Use a square and make sure the bracket is square to the X-axis rail before tightening the two bolts that mount the bracket to the carriage. It could also be that the bracket was not bent at exactly 90 degrees, but that is more rare.
The Crossfire 3 was designed with you, the pilot, in mind. From the plain-to-see to the supposedly inconsequential, every detail makes for an effortless and enjoyable flight. Shape, planform, lines: in every component is invested years of experience, thousands of ideas and countless hours of development.
What can you expect when you fly your brand new JYRO Crossfire 3 for the first time?
The unique blend of awesome openings, hassle-free flight and unrestricted everyday practicality that the Crossfire is known for, mixed with the cutting edge design and performance that is typical of JYRO (previously Icarus Canopies by NZ Aerosports) high performance wings. And the inevitable desire to do it all again after every landing.
Who is the Crossfire 3 for?
The most important thing to note with the JYRO Crossfire 3 is that she is a fully elliptical, very efficiently designed high performance canopy. She is not suitable as a first canopy for students off AFF. She must be treated with respect and caution at all times, but particularly in the adjustment period with the new wing. Her dive is more aggressive and her recovery arc longer than the Crossfire 2. The sight picture for your turn, landing and flare will be different than the wings you have flown before.
At light wingloadings of 1.0 to 1.4, the Crossfire 3 is suitable as a first or second fully elliptical 9-cell for confident intermediate jumpers stepping it up a notch or three from their Safire 2, 3 or equivalent. We recommend a minimum of 500 jumps on a square or semi-elliptical canopy before moving to a Crossfire 3 of an appropriate wingloading for these jumpers.
Toggles
Toggles give you all the feedback you need to feel connected with this wing. More aggressive inputs will cause drastic altitude loss, but if you feel inclined to sit in deep brakes taking in that last jump and reflecting on how damn awesome it was, she is happy to oblige.
Rears
The extra glide helped by her constant cell aspect ratio means you can hang off your rears for a worry-free ride back to the dropzone after a long spot. Or use them to give you that exhilarating swoop to end your skydive.
Performance
Enjoy the ultimate fun flying experience without the drag (pun sadly intended) of a less responsive wing. The highly elliptical Crossfire 3 has snappy turns and incredible performance.
The Dive
Probably the biggest question we have been asked. Yes, she does dive more! We made this a priority. Drooped wing-tips minimize wingtip drag to maximize efficiency and power. The dive is also predictable and controllable, giving you the confidence to find consistency in your landing. Feel confident whipping through your turn knowing that you can harness a huge amount of power for your landing.
Flare
She will give you huge confidence on landing with a powerful predictable flare. Enjoy your swoop without worrying about hard landings; the nose reinforcement reduces distortion during the flare to give you that much needed extra lift at the bottom end.
I jumped a 99 Crossfire 3 from around 800 jumps to 1300 jumps and absolutely loved it. It was perfect for the work jumping I was doing at the time and my canopy progression. My crossfire had super reliable openings and was easy to pack, as well as allowed me to learn the basics of swooping before i moved on to the JFX I jump now. I would definitely recommend it for any jumpers looking to progress past the Safire and onto something with a bit more performance.
Hello people..
I'm new to Crossfire.. using 2x Asus RX 580 OC Dual 8GB (got the 2nd one nearly for free and thought about to give it a try because I cant afford a new GPU) .. I know, there are not that much games supporting that..
But I found out there were some kind of Crossfire options (afr friendly, afr compatible or 1x1 optimized, ...) in previous Adrenalin versions.. another forum user said that this "has been resolved" 20.2.2.
I updated to 20.5.1 before I installed the second GPU.. so I cant tell if there were these Crossfire options before.. but now they are just missing..
Found some other guy asking the same on reddit .. here is a screenshot of the others ones configs (red) and mine (green) where AMD CrossFire Mode is "just" disabled.. while in 20.5.1 this option doesnt even exist in any tab
The crossfire profiles are missing in Adrenalin 2020.
So are options w.r.t which GPUs you can pair (if you have 3 RX590s on your system you used to be able to decide which 2 you can pair up.
I think the Crossfire options such as AFR Friendly etc were aso gone.
Crossfire is pretty much dead and has been since the Wattman variant of drivers started. Even most games that did support it have not done so with recent updates. It is discontinued as well as Nvidias SLI after DX11. DX 12 supports multi gpu and only a hand full of games support that.
I actually downgraded my Adrenaline Drivers to 20.1.2 .. where it works good on the most games I've tested so far..
Except some weird green flickering while my computer is booting.. which ends when Windows is loaded :-)
Would be nice to bring back these options to the newest drivers, Mr. Ray :3
Interesting that theres still some activity in this thread and this was the only answer that helped back then.
Luckily someone gifted me a RX6800 two years ago, which made using Crossfire unnecessary for me now my niche is using one of my old RX580 to play Roblox.. lol. Still a nice GPU if you ask me.
I had issues as well with two RX580, it seemed that my Issue was within the Bios settings. I disabled the option "Above 4G decoding" in the BIOS settings. After reboot Crossfire option showed up normal again.
Does Hybrid driver method work for previous drivers before 19.12.1? Because I tried that with 19.11.1 version(lazy me using old drivers from local AMD folder) and still failed to find Enable/Disable Crossfire option.
It is infuriating that every 3D application assumes you want to use Crossfire. In FurMark, it shows Crossfire is enabled, even then, the second card cannot work as intended and it is stuck at 300Mhz. No wonder occasional FPS drops are happening. I bought my second RX480 with the intention of using it as a seperate adapter, for encoding and computational tasks while I use my primary gpu to handle 3D applications. It is a shame that such basic on/off button had to brought back by procedures composed of jerry rigging yet alone AMD forced it to be done in first place.
I only started using the Hybbrid driver method since Adrenalin 2019 19.12.1 to avoid the Adrenalin 2020 GUI/UI unstable mess.
Keeping the Global Crossfire switch set to ON will result in poorer performance because there is additional driver overhead, even if the Profile has Crossfire "disabled" or the game / application does not support DX11 Crossfire or DX12 MultiGPU.
You need to turn the Global Crossfire Switch OFF.
Sometimes Crossfire will not disengage if you turn Global Crossfire OFF in the global menu, AMD settings will restart and Crossfire will be ON.
Here is a trick to try.
Turn Crossfire OFF in the Global Settings menu and immediately reboot your PC.
CrossFire should be OFF when your PC powers on.
Thanks for the indepth reply.
Funny thing is that I didn't buy any nvidia cards after my GeForce 2 PRO back in , i think 2005, because their drivers annoyed me I guess I'll stick with AMD and hope they implement some feature to switch between eyefinity/non-eyefinity
Previously I was able to tunnel the telemetry protocol from an FMU running Betaflight through crossfire protocol by using Bluetooth and WiFi without any problems. But the base station was Mission Planner. With QGroundControl was not working at all. You have here the videos:
Jackpots, junior rodeos, amateurs, high school rodeo, NIRA, everyone followed the crossfire ban of the PRCA. The PRCA team roping director at the time of the ban was Dick Yates. Dick discussed the matter with a lot of his fellow team ropers and the majority of professional ropers at that time agreed that it was in the best interest of professional rodeo and team roping to restrict crossfire. I visited with Dick about it recently and here are some of his comments:
With that simple statement from the guy that had the vote, history on the PRCA decision was maybe a little simpler than folks believe. Which brings us to today. Roping on a basketball court with one hop to the wall on the most watched rodeo in the world may indeed lead to an exception to the rule in the professional world. The problem is that although PRCA set the initial rule for rodeo, times have changed and pro roping is miniscule in size and range to the recreational roping market. What happens at the NFR has no bearing on you and I. In the real world recreational roping rules (99.8%), which make the USTRC rule change much bigger and maybe just a little bewildering.
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