It sounds like you hit the F10 key by mistake.
Each aircraft has a set of "views" that you can customize to your liking. You set those views by hitting the appropriate view key (Numpad 5 is the straight ahead view) and then hitting the F10 key to save that view for that aircraft. That way you can have hot keys to, for example, see the compass and it will work in each aircraft because that view is specific to that aircraft but you use the same key for every aircraft.
With Track IR it usually (or maybe always) uses the Numpad 5 key for the straight ahead view and that's what it centers to. So if you've reset the Numpad 5 key by accident (easy to do) that's what Track IR centers to. And, of course, if you're in Track IR and looking elsewhere and hit the F10 key mistake it does the same thing and saves that to the Numpad 5 view.
You can fix it by first turning Track IR off and then launching a mission. The Freeflight takeoff is a good one for this since your aircraft is on the ground.
Once in the cockpit hit the Numpad 5 key, this will likely take you to the skewed view you mentioned. Then, using the mouse and the view command keys (Home, Delete, End, Page Up, Page Down and Insert ... and the zoom keys Numpad minus and plus, you can set the Numbpad 5 view to whereever you want it. Then just press F10 to "save" the view.
You may or may not have to exit ROF, then turn on Track IR and you should find that when centered Track IR will behave.
There is a bit of a glitch in the program currently in that it will not save the zoom you chose. I just make it a point at the start of every mission to center Track IR, zoom out using the Numpad Minus key and then hit F10 to save it for that mission. Be careful to look straight ahead when hitting the F10 key or you'll cause the same problem you started with. This is a known issue.
Hope that helps.
WH_JoeBob
Last edited by WH_JoeBob; 08/11/09 04:30 PM.