mopysworld
New Member
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2010
- Messages
- 158
I am probably not posting this in the correct section but I have a question that I hope can be answered without me posting a log file... if need be ill post them tomorrow.
The question is can anyone tell me the difference in the spell casting logic between the 4 various CCs I am about to list... more to the point the casting delay between spells does the CC handle the delay or is apart of the base code to HB. The reason why I am asking is when I started up my priest again after a couple of days off since the last time I used it which was running fine using khryses.... the following CCs have anywhere from 3-10s between casting of there spells in combat.
Khryses, Ecliptor, and the default ePriest all seem to have really long delays between cast. Figuring it was a CC issue at first due to the fact that the other 3 classes I tried work flawless mage, druid, and paladin. The only priest CC that works speed wise currently is the One CC but it doesn't support shadow in its current version.
After searching for post on the subject of casting delays I tried the following step each time starting HB back up. I rebooted the computer and cleaned wow cache before each attempt. Made a new temp folder for each of the 3 versions of HB newest to oldest 1.333 and down that is still under the DL section, Using only the current priest CC I'm testing to resolve the issue in the custom cc folder all the others where removed.
1. re-installed .net 3.5 sp 1
2. multiple machines x64 and x86 Win7
3. Bare bones WoW (only stock blizzard addons)
4. NO updates/driver/etc was loaded on the machine from the last time Khryses worked flawlessly with the exception of shutting down the computer.
FPS was around 60-120, CPU load 50-75, Latency 180-250 depending on the machine. After looking over the code/scripts in the CC's I could ePriest,One-CC I am at a lost for the reason. I quess I could learn the syntax for making my own CC but I doubt that would fix the issue seeing as it is only affecting the priest classes. Coding seems similar to MQ2 plugin/macros with Lau thrown in so shouldn't be to hard to get up to speed.
The question is can anyone tell me the difference in the spell casting logic between the 4 various CCs I am about to list... more to the point the casting delay between spells does the CC handle the delay or is apart of the base code to HB. The reason why I am asking is when I started up my priest again after a couple of days off since the last time I used it which was running fine using khryses.... the following CCs have anywhere from 3-10s between casting of there spells in combat.
Khryses, Ecliptor, and the default ePriest all seem to have really long delays between cast. Figuring it was a CC issue at first due to the fact that the other 3 classes I tried work flawless mage, druid, and paladin. The only priest CC that works speed wise currently is the One CC but it doesn't support shadow in its current version.
After searching for post on the subject of casting delays I tried the following step each time starting HB back up. I rebooted the computer and cleaned wow cache before each attempt. Made a new temp folder for each of the 3 versions of HB newest to oldest 1.333 and down that is still under the DL section, Using only the current priest CC I'm testing to resolve the issue in the custom cc folder all the others where removed.
1. re-installed .net 3.5 sp 1
2. multiple machines x64 and x86 Win7
3. Bare bones WoW (only stock blizzard addons)
4. NO updates/driver/etc was loaded on the machine from the last time Khryses worked flawlessly with the exception of shutting down the computer.
FPS was around 60-120, CPU load 50-75, Latency 180-250 depending on the machine. After looking over the code/scripts in the CC's I could ePriest,One-CC I am at a lost for the reason. I quess I could learn the syntax for making my own CC but I doubt that would fix the issue seeing as it is only affecting the priest classes. Coding seems similar to MQ2 plugin/macros with Lau thrown in so shouldn't be to hard to get up to speed.