Which is a good thing. X-Plane needs complex products! Luckily more are on the way, but someone has to break the ice. Customers have been crying for it! It IS applicable if you used the advanced menu options as specified in one of the manuals. There's a reason X-Plane has this menu in existence. They were thinking forward to a day like this when it would be needed! It is not a "Gizmo issue", but the reality that almost every other aircraft you seem to have purchased or downloaded was developed by using X-Plane's default throttle quadrant functionality, which then means it used default datarefs. As such, some things just worked because there was no programming logic other than what X-Plane already offers to make it operate. For the Saab 340, we couldn't do that if we wanted the aircraft to act like the real thing. X-Plane does not support this functionality right, so we custom programmed it to be like the REAL aircraft. The end result is we made alternate accommodations for you to use your hardware (and by the way, there's plenty of people using Saitek equipment with this product). Consider this a primer on what's to come in future add-ons. It's good to get familiar with the more advanced options in X-Plane's menus! It's logical, yes. But, as per the documentation included with this aircraft states, it's also incorrect. You still have more to learn about the X-Plane community and its history. Either way, not a discussion for this thread, as it's honestly irrelevant and the answer to this question exists in so many different places...with a little research that is. That said, it's essentially water under the bridge by now and I warn you that doing such research is an honest waste of your time. We're focused on moving forward. That's it. You can most certainly get your hardware to work as it should with this aircraft. Learning is part of that process. Let me just say, however, that this is not helping. I hope you reconsider, as your statements in that post are false to a very large degree.