
I'm only listing the ones I changed, everything else is set to the iRacing default keybindings: Anyway, here are my iRacing keybinds that go with this Voice Attack profile. You can also change the words to be anything you like. You'll have to either edit it, which is easy to do, or reconfigure your iRacing to match it. My profile relies on the way I have my buttons programmed in iRacing itself, so this profile won't work for everyone immediately. If I ever need more than that, I can say "Plus" repeatedly (or push a button the wheel) and just keep incrementing the fuel counter until it gets to the exact number I want.

There may be a better way of adding specific amounts of fuel to the tank, but that's the best I could come up with for now. I can say "Add 3 gallons" and it'll give me the closest amount of fuel the car has to 3 gallons.
#FREE VOICE ATTACK IRACING PROFILE FULL#
I can say "Full Pit" and it'll give me 4 tires and a full tank of gas. I can say "Tires" and it'll display the Tire blackbox. There may be better ways of setting it up, but this is how I have it programmed right now.

Again, don't need to worry about being on the right blackbox.Īnd here's my 90% finished iRacing profile: iRacing - Maxx77 You can say "right side" and have Voice Attack type out the whole command, #rf rr$ and Enter. There's no need to be on any particular blackbox, and no need to program a complex macro controlling where the mouse needs to move to.Īn alternative way to do the same thing but not have to use one of the 15 auto text chat fields in iRacing's options menu would be to just program those text strings into Voice Attack. In Voice Attack, I have it set up so that when I say "Left side", all Voice Attack does is press the 3 button. #lf lr$ is bound to 3, and so on (these are commands I used to have mapped to buttons on my wheel). But in a nutshell, within iRacing I programmed a bunch of commands into the Options tab of the Options menu. I'm at work right now, otherwise I'd share the file (I'll put a link to it when I get home later in the day). The way I've currently set my profile is much simpler and doesn't rely on the mouse at all. You have a whole lot of mouse movement macros to simulate moving the cursor to the blackbox and clicking the individual things you want, such as each tire. Once I finish programming it for iRacing, I'll post my script in case anyone wants to try it the way I've set it The way you set up your profile for iRacing is. I tried it for all of 5 minutes and was immediately sold. You can only have a handful of commands programmed into it at a time in that version. It's like having the verbal features of Kinect except it's fully programmable and actually works more often than it fails. You could have it work with Netflix, iTunes, Giantbomb, etc., where you could say "Pause" and "Play" to control the video playback. It'd be great for flight sims, where you'd be able to just shout "eject eject eject!" and have the game respond appropriately. I'm going to use it the next time I do a race, which will be the real test.


Even with my surround sound cranked up, Voice Attack heard me clearly and only on a couple of occasions failed to understand my command. I've only tested it out in a solo session, but the results were very good. You can trigger specific blackboxes to appear just by saying their name. You could also verbally change the brake bias, weight jacker, and race tape. iRacing would then queue up the two right tires to be changed, put in a full tank of gas, and display the words "pitting in" for everyone to see. You could, for example, just say "right side tires, full tank, pitting in". and have them be triggered by your voice. Voice Attack lets you program commands/macros/etc. I'd never really noticed how big a problem this is until I found an $8 program called Voice Attack. all of these things take button presses or the mouse. Manipulating how much fuel to get on the next stop, requesting only the right side tires be changed, navigating to a specific blackbox. I don't know about the rest of you, but if I have to use the mouse or keyboard while racing to enter commands, that's a problem. Sims like iRacing have a unique problem that most games don't have.
