Lawfer wrote:It's basically at my hand levels, placing it on top of the screen would have been too high, I think it's best for the sensor bar to be parallel to the Wii Remote position.
That's what I thought. I'm starting to think that the Wii Remote being level with the Wii Sensor Bar's position is the most important thing, and so you should place the sensor bar wherever that is: centered perfectly above or below the TV. Bonus points if that position is also closest to the center of the display compared to any other place the Wii Sensor Bar could be set.
Dochartaigh wrote:Isn't there also the Motion Plus controllers which are supposed to be more accurate?
Yes, but the Wii Motion Plus (+) Controller only makes a difference with Wii / Wii U games that support it. It won't make the motion controls more accurate with games that don't support it, and other things like the Wii Menu, Wii Channels, etc.
fernan1234 wrote:The sensor bar probably doesn't matter too much for Wiimote precision given that you can literally use two lit candlesticks as a sensor bar replacement

I actually did this a few times when my Wii Sensor Bar became damaged and stopped working.
Lawfer wrote:Some games such as Skyward Sword will only work with it.
Skyward Sword requires the Wii Motion Plus (+) Controller to play, much like how Majora's Mask on the N64 requires the RAM Expansion Pak to play.
Syntax wrote:The only thing that will effect accuracy on wiimotes is light pollution.
The wii motion plus have a dual axis gyro sensor in them for working out quick movements.
This is what I'm worried about. I have a window in my room, so my CRT screens are facing away from the window to avoid glare and reflections from sunlight. But as a result, my Wii Motion Plus (+) Controllers are facing toward the window. Since sunlight is 50% infrared light, 40% visible light, and 10% ultraviolet light, that may screw up my Wii Remote's accuracy. Maybe I should get blinders or only play at night when my room is pitch-black darkness.
Galgomite wrote:You can adjust sensitivity in a Wii menu. I found turning it all the way up (or nearly so) made everything better. In theory you’re balancing sensitivity against false reads but I’m by a window with multiple lights and have no problems. Bar under tv but probably 4ft up as my tv is high.
True. While increasing the sensitivity will make the motion controls faster and more receptive, it also gives you less room for fine adjustments.
elvis wrote:I've found wider matters more than above or below.
I either make my own IR LED clusters to put at the corners of the screen, or hack up a cheap third party IR bar and extend the distance between the LEDs. That improves accuracy for me, especially on larger TVs.
That makes sense. It seems both the left and right IR LEDs of the Wii Sensor Bar are detected by the Wii Remote to map inputs and their XY axis. But the space between each IR LED is not representative of the space between the left and right side of the display.
I might actually do this. Instead of placing the infrared LED clusters in the corners though, maybe it's better to place them where they are parallel to your Wii Remote's position and halfway down the left and ride sides of the screen.
Einzelherz wrote:The most accurate is in the center of the screen. You should do that, GL.
See above.