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Swordsman422

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Everything posted by Swordsman422

  1. Not an entire skin, no. But it can be done with a set of decals. There are quite a few skinners, including EricJ and I, who had created some very complex skins for aircraft that replace any markings, even safety stencils and national insignia, with respect to aircraft modex number. What you are seeing is not a new skinset, but that a certain set of decals is being applied or omitted based on the aircraft number. I am currently working on a project to make a skin-as-decal system where the aircraft textures are actually all decals. This is doable, but it's very complicated and figuring it out is taking me a lot of time. I have to have the component names, figure out the orientation and scaling, etc. I've had some luck but nothing publishable just yet.
  2. Um... That's an F-14A, not a D. I Don't think there ever was a D-model painted in splinter camo.
  3. Wargame: European Escalation

    Dang! I remember Crossroads being one of my absolute least favorite missions. That and Hell's Highway or whatever it was called from one other campaign. Your screenshots really capture the frantic pace some of the battles can take. Though much more limited in terms of unlocks, EE has one thing that ALB and RD lack, and that is that the campaigns have something more of a soul instead of a chess match. In EE you start to care about the units you have available to you. That platoon of Leo 1s you've had since the beginning, the squads of fusiliers that joined you midway through, that old reliable scout that's been your eyes and ears and seems to survive everything. That's what ALB and RD are missing. That said, I still prefer the other two in almost every measurable way. I am looking forward to your continued reports.
  4. Wargame: European Escalation

    I had also picked up Red Dragon on flash sale for $10, and every mod I make to ALB, I am making to RD. RD allows you to in solo skirmish mode, play against a deck you have created. So if you want to do something so tiny as a single tank company with an HQ train against, say, company-sized combined-arms unit with two mechanized infantry platoons and two tank platoons, you can. The brake is also really nice, in that you can pause, issue orders, and then got back to play speed allowing your units to carry out orders simultaneously.
  5. Wargame: European Escalation

    33Lima, thanks to you I am now modding Wargame again. My current project is intended to remove card count restrictions, and to have each card represent a company of tanks, IFVs, or logistical trucks (12), platoons of support vehicles (4), flights of helicopters (4), or elements of aircraft (2). Ammunition counts for the main guns will be accurate, i.e. 42 rounds for the M1A1 instead of 25, 36 rounds for the T-80BV instead of 20, etc, so that they are slightly less dependent on logistical support. I'll also decrease some unit costs. My main goal will be for players to create decks that would reflect real world unit orders of battle. Typically you don't see an armored btn. composed of several different types of tanks, or a recon unit with different classes of vehicles.
  6. Wargame: European Escalation

    Having always been a fan of late Cold War conflict potential, I am loving these reports and have started playing ALB again! A warning about this campaign... Try to save as many units as you can. The very last mission is a real teeth-grinder without having everything you can possibly throw. Also, just as urban areas are terrible to push through, if they are unoccupied, it can really shock you how well a few well-hidden squads of infantrymen can hold off an armored column. If you can make use of the towns, do so. Just keep your tanks well out of them. When I finally got to the Able Archer campaign, I went a little crazy and saved any time I did anything, so that should I lose even a single unit, I can go back and retry that last few seconds. Almost all the campaigns have downer endings. Bruder Gegen Bruder was probably the only one that didn't.
  7. Wargame: European Escalation

    Just a suggestion for EE, artillery is nice, but heavy on the supply lines and not terribly accurate at ranges you might consider useful. Mortar vehicles are a lot more flexible, and while range is limited, accuracy is an improvement. No civilians, BTW, so be fully prepared to level or steer clear of any village you come across. I look forward to your next report.
  8. JetEngine.WAV

    You could probably use the extractor to find the sound file again. A lot of them are rolled up into the sounddata library (I think. I am at work right now), so you should be able to find originals there.
  9. Wargame: European Escalation

    I have both EE and ALB. I prefer ALB for the tactical utility afforded by aircraft. However, one of my main sticking points has been the unit system. Sure, I get cards limiting the type and number of units available, but I always found it unrealistic that the player could not always put together a realistic grouping of units, especially late period types. Why are their only two cards of M1A1s available when building a deck? And yet I am able to field dozens of mechanized infantry vehicles? I just never understood limiting the number of cards available to the player. As long as I have deck points available, I should be able to draw as many cards of any type as I can afford, even if it is wasteful. I once went in and modded ALB to allow the player to draw up to six of every type of card, with all of the cards representing no less than 4 of that type. Then a patch happened and all that work went poof. The realization of that was not one of my shining examples of maturity.
  10. WWII fighter throttle position in cruise flight

    Egads, what a loaded question! Cruise configuration is normally different for every aircraft type and also depends on altitude, air density, and even desired rate of consumption. To throw in the mix that with props you aren't just talking about throttle, but mixture rates as well. Just as an example, in a Cessna 172P for a typical cruise flight at 4500 ASL, I'd pull mixture and throttle out to aim for max conserve at 1800 RPM, but in a Diamond DA20, at the same altitude for cruise I'd be setting for 2000 RPM. Best way to get a good answer is to find a checklist for the aircraft you are interested in knowing about and checking the cruise section. This will give you your target configuration info.
  11. F-14AB update #2

    MigBuster, you are making me sweat in lust. Those renders look sick! I've been waiting to get DCS until I can have a Tomcat to use in it. I'm sold already. As a side note, the HGU-33 flight helmet had almost been phased out by 1988, replaced with the HGU-55 and later -68 (which cannot be easily distinguished with common modifications in the paraloft). Keep it though. It's a popular model.
  12. Irresponsible things that one does for fun in their youth

    During my days at what is now University of North Georgia, my friends and I would soak tennis balls or tampons overnight in kerosene and sneaking them into the cannon used for Retreat.
  13. What Other Games Are You Playing?

    FSX Gold Edition with the California Classics 1960's scenery and traffic, because I mainly fly the Captain Sim Boeing 707-300. And I am a sucker for golden-age Pan American. Sins of a Solar Empire: Rebellion with the Armada 3 MOD IL2 1946 with TFM The first makes up around 70% of my gaming time.
  14. I've been attending flight school at an FAR 141 FBO on nights and weekends for the better part of six months. I don't post about it very much because it isn't particularly exciting for anyone but me. But yesterday was definitely a break from the usual. I was having a bad day flying. I'm usually on the ball and pretty good. But yesterday I was behind the plane and just couldn't catch a break. Windy, bumpy weather, and there was a terrible eddy coming off the trees on approach that would cause me to balloon, then dump at the threshold. Not a very good day for a beginner and certainly did nothing for my confidence. The sun was setting on my last circuit through the pattern, and I was hitting all of my altitude cues and actually doing pretty well for a change in the day. I was cleared number one ahead of a medevac Learjet, callsign 6CJ and asked to perform a truncated approach. I was at this point just at the 45 on the downwind and about to make base turn so I gave serious consideration to asking if I could give way to the much faster Learjet. Instead, I just decided to comply with instructions and answered "Short final and cleared for landing runway 7, Skyhawk 507." I curved in the final, quickly ran my GUMPS check, and was a little fast on the approach. Lost my depth perception in the twilight at the threshold and bounced the landing pretty roughly. I rolled out and was given instructions to clear the runway as soon as I could, because 6CJ was right behind me. About fifty yards away from my turn-off there were three deer standing on the runway about midfield. Given that I had not received a wildlife alert, I suspected that the tower was not aware of them, so I immediately told them about it as I taxied clear. My suspicions were confirmed, because the next thing I hear is "6CJ, go around NOW!" And over the puttering of my propeller I hear the Learjet's engines spool to full TOGA as it screams down the runway not fifty feet overhead. They had been just seconds from touching down, and their rollout would have been a good deal longer than mine. Moments later I received some calls of gratitude from the tower and the crew of the Learjet. I dunno if any of you have ever seen a car hit a deer, but an airplane hitting a deer is exponentially more catastrophic. I may not have been able to fly worth a damn yesterday but at least I was in the right place at the right time.
  15. Spectre, the more the merrier. Just give credit where warranted. Dave, yeah, I'm pretty rare everywhere nowadays. 40 hours work week and flight school every weekend when the weather is good. Spare time is something I am sorely lacking. The company that manufactures minutes needs to get the factory in high gear!
  16. A, B, and D use the same skin. Only difference is #5. You can edit one and apply it to all. Also (shameless plug) you can pick up one of my skins with the decal map and edit it to your desire.
  17. So, gents, I've decided to stop looking longingly at the sky and start actually getting up there. A former coworker of mine from my days at the hobby shop is now an FO for Fed Ex. He and I both had a passion for aviation, and he decided a few years ago (when he was the age I am now) to get started from zero time and training and work his way up. A few weeks ago he got in touch with me and pointed me in the direction of the flight school he went to, which is an FAA part 141 FBO. I plan on following in his footsteps. Maybe if I am very lucky I can eventually work for the same airline that my father-in-law runs the sheet metal shop for. I start on Saturday.
  18. Enough dreaming. Time to fly for real...

    First lesson went well. Except for a 360 turn for sequencing, I had the aircraft from start-up to shut down. I did have a little assistance on the landing, as it was crosswind. My instructor talked me through the flight instead of showing, which is how I learn best. He even got me to work the radio a couple of times. I did get a little motion sick. You can feel everything in a C172, and it was a hot day so there were lots of thermals. And I may have been concentrating too hard on keeping the vertical speed indicator at zero. Any of you pilots have an idea of how long it takes to get over the movement? But man, you can't beat the view.
  19. Enough dreaming. Time to fly for real...

    I have just turned 34 in may. The school I am going to requires that anyone passing their professional pilot program work for them as a CFI for a period of 18 months after achieving certification. The reasoning is two fold. They want to get back out of you what they put in, and they want you to be able to build your hours towards working for charter, freight, or passenger service. In exchange for this, they cost about 1/3 less than most professional programs. It might be a bit of a struggle for a couple of years, but the end result will be a lot better than what I am doing now.
  20. Another 777 lost

    Reading the geographical area affected by the NOTAM that was rejected by Ukraine that closed off anything at or below 29k feet, that geographical area was pretty wide, going all the way east to the Crimea. Diverting south and west around it would have burned quite a bit of fuel. It's all one. The Ukrainian authorities rejected the 29k NOTAM and continued to provide ARTCC service for the control zone only with the warning that airliners may be under the simultaneous control of Russian ARTCC. So the company made the decision to keep flying the route as published. Foolish, but they weren't the only ones who continued to use it. Aeroflot, Turkish Air, and Lufthansa were among flights within that route segment that have now been ordered to divert. UKCC probably has their hands full right now. You are quite right, Erik. Money should not have been an issue with regards to the safety of its passengers. US airlines were ordered not to use that route at all and as far as I am aware have complied.
  21. Another 777 lost

    If I read the NOTAMs right, the airspace was restricted at altitudes of 7900 feet and below. Anything above has right of transit and this aircraft was at 33,000 feet. 777-200s at cruising speed and altitudes between 30-35k burn 864 US gallons per side per hour. Amsterdam to Kuala Lampur is a 13.5 hour flight at cruise for the 777 assuming a 30 minute each for departure and approach. That's ~23,300 burnt in transit not including what is spent in airport movement and climbout. The 777-200 has a maximum fuel quantity of ~31,000, but likely as not there was less fuel aboard. Less fuel equals less weight equals less fuel burnt and thus a decrease in the per seat operating costs of the flight. Any diversion around airspace that is not restricted is risky and not economical for the airline. They were at 33,000 feet; well above the restriction within the control zone of UKCC. THey were within right of transit and if they had not been, UKCC would have ordered them to alter course appropriately and/or the NOTAM would have included a higher restricted altitude within its geographic area.
  22. I might suggest downloading a skin for the aircraft that you want to make for and see what they've done. Sometimes it isn't that you made the decal wrong, you just don't have the location mapped correctly. In situations like this, it's a bit of trial-and-error to move a decal into the correct location. What I wouldn't give for a 3D skin editor... If it is a default aircraft and you are just wanting to add squadron-specific decals, what I would do is "borrow" a default decal for the aircraft and create your art over the top of it in a new layer, then deleting the original layer. Save it as the same name but with a number that matches the unit number given in the squadron list.ini. I'd be more precise with these directions, but I am not currently home.
  23. Don't know if this has ever been brought up. So, one fine day I fired up SF2 before trading out my tank control yoke for my flight stick and lost my joystick mapping. In the process of remapping my 12 buttons, I noticed under the targeting command list Target Object Under Reticle that wasn't mapped to anything. This command, as says on the tin, will visually target any object, friendly, enemy, air, land, sea, or structure over which the gunsight is centered. I've found this command to be very useful when I want my wingmen to destroy structures adjacent to the primary target or when making a carrier landing and needing to know my distance from the boat. I haven't seen this brought up in topic before, so I thought I'd share.
  24. That's the name of it, Malibu. Sorry, I was posting a couple of days after the fact and a sheet-and-a-half windward. Anyway, I have never seen it being discussed as an answer to the complaint that we cannot target friendly ground objects. When using it as a carrier landing aide, sometimes I pick up one of the aircraft on the flight deck, but it still works well enough.
  25. Caaattttsssssss! (Yell it like Kirk yelling Khan)

    I dunno about that cat just defending territory. Right after she kicks the dog, she tosses the kid a glance like she's checking on him before continuing to chase the dog. She also stops and returns to her family once she determines the dog is no longer a threat and waits for the kid to get up and run, continuing to impose herself between the child and the direction the danger went. When I was younger, my mother's cat attacked a dalmatian that came into our yard and growled at me. She didn't care much about the dog until it made a threatening noise, then she jumped on its back and rode it tumbling down a hill.
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