Jump to content

ndicki

SENIOR MEMBER
  • Content count

    964
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by ndicki

  1. Well, I can't get SFP1E_10.exe to run. First, it hangs on "Registering fonts" during install, then when I actually try to run it, I select the cat file, click and I get an error message "Error accessing external object property filename." Which is explicit. Any ideas? I've tried downloading from another source, in case it was corrupt, but reinstalling changes nothing.
  2. So let's hear a review from someone who knows his way around - how does it compare with the existing F-4Ks? I'm still running a number of ex-SFP1 versions as I have the old LODs as well.
  3. BF109 B/C/D BY Monty CZ

    Another first-class piece of work from Monty CZ. Many thanks!
  4. Buccaneer FAA for SF2

    A truly beautifully-made representation of one of the iconic British aircraft of the last 50 years - one of the very best models in SF2, and that includes the stock ones. Many thanks!
  5. The Stork Emblem

    The stork is one of the traditional symbols of Alsace, one of the Departments France lost to Prussia during the 1870 war. Using the stork was an affirmation of their belonging to France - a moot point to say the least, in cultural terms, as the local dialect is German-based - and in the same register as the Second World War 'Rhin-et-Danube' title of the French 1st Army.
  6. Can you pm me the data.ini? That way I have some idea where you started...
  7. That's the problem - direct hit or nothing. Don't some SAMs have proximity fuses though?
  8. I like those guns, too! Good stuff. Has anyone worked out a way to make flak kill you? (Thinking aloud... If each flak shell were actually configured as a a non- or not very manoeuvring SAM, would it work?)
  9. Brilliant work, Monty! Looking very, very good.
  10. Buccaneer

    Fantastic work - looks absolutely stunning! (With reduced LODs, please!)
  11. It's got nothing to do with the politicians, except perhaps those who proffer every possible excuse for bad, uncivilised behaviour on the grounds that the defendant comes from a disadvantaged background and never had access to HD TV until he was eight. And so on. If it was political, they'd be off to trash the Party headquarters or the Houses of Parliament. As they've decided to trash Dixons and Curry's instead, you can assume that it is exactly what it looks like - the criminal underclass who generally sit swilling Tesco budget lager in car parks, have decided it's time for some new gadgetry about the house. After all, there's a limit to the quantity of electronics and brand-name hoodies and trainers you can buy when you're on handouts. This is what you get after decades of lefty do-gooders who sob about the injustice of it all - "Poor boy, it isn't your fault you're a foul-mouthed dangerous little sh*t, have another handout and please be nice and stop mugging grannies and pushing drugs" - instead of teaching the bastards to get out of bed, wash, get dressed like normal human beings and above all, GET A FECKING JOB! And there are jobs to be had, even if to begin with it might not be much fun. Why do the Polish come to England by the boatload? And succeed? The future does not look frightfully rosy, I'm afraid to say.
  12. B-24J Liberator (Pasko), Indian Air Force, Ver.2

    This IS a good idea! Cheers, Kevin!
  13. Very nice! Well done. Couple of minor hitches - the Springboks always face inboard or to the fore, and technical markings, for example on the control surfaces, are in Afrikaans or English, not French (admittedly, I can't read them, but they appear to contain three words - NE PAS MARCHER - rather than the two of BLY AF or NO STEP). I can't remember precisely how this was managed. I think it was English port side and Afrikaans starboard side on aircraft with an even-numbered serial, and vice-versa... Don't quote me because I could very probably be wrong. Lloyd might know.
  14. This is the follow-on of the MkVb stand-in - from 15th August 1941, the order went out to overpaint the Dark Earth areas with a new grey shade made up on-station from mixing seven parts of Medium Sea Grey to one part Night. The resulting shade was given the official name of Ocean Grey, but had none of the blueish hue of the definitive shade of (unmixed) Ocean Grey introduced in mid-1942. This theoretically darker, blue-free shade was common up until the end of 1942, and predictably varied immensely in its application, ranging from a dark grey similar to Dark Sea Grey to a paler grey virtually indistinuguishable from the original Medium Sea Grey. These aircraft are from No.401 Sqn RAF - originally No.1 Sqn RCAF, which was renumbered in order to avoid confusion. A certain Pilot Officer Don Blakeslee (BL753 'H') may not be unknown to the Americans on the forum. Again, all serial numbers correspond to aircraft in service with 401 during the spring and summer of 1942, and mnay of the individual letters correspond to the serials. Quite a lot of work, actually...
  15. Need help from the Folks in the UK

    Silvermans will have it, I'd expect, or Du Bora. http://www.silvermans.co.uk/ProductDetails/tabid/89/Department/Military/Category/WEBBING/Description/PLCE+WEBBING+YOKE/ItemId/3240/CurrentPage/1/Default.aspx You'll pay as much in carriage as you will for the yoke, but still, if you want it badly enough. Can't think why - PLCE is utter rubbish. '58 was far better once you got rid of the large pack.
  16. So there you are at angels 20 swanning round and enjoying the view, when you catch a glimpse of a swarm of Heinkels pottering along blithely towards the land of hope and glory, clearly intent on all kinds of mischief. "Toaster aircraft, this is Toaster Leader, about twenty bandits at two o'clock low, look like Heinkels. Blue section stay up and cover us - they may have little friends in the area, so keep them well peeled. Red section, going down..." And off you pop to give them a bit of a squirt, throttle back as you dive, eye in the mirror, there's Johnny covering your tail, so in we go... Thumb on the rocker, he'll do, that one at the back looking like he hasn't seen us and...." And your FPS drop to slideshow levels as the Heinkels open fire on you. Rather spoils the immersion, actually. Does anybody have any suggestions? I've tried a few things, but to no avail...
  17. The problem is that we DON'T have workable fixes! We've got a few ideas, many of which might vaguely help get a few extra FPS, but the basic problem remains.
  18. We should have - it was the fighter pilot's paradise, so to speak. These are from the first batch of 16 Spitfires ferried by HMS Eagle during Operation Spotter - 15 aircraft finally took off from the carrier under S/L Stan Grant on 7th March 1942, and all 15 arrived safely in Malta. They were handed over to No.249 Sqn at Takali. Two weeks later when a further 9 aircraft arrived on Operation Picket I, only two of the initial batch were still airworthy. They were all newly-built MkVb aircraft received by No.8 MU and specially ferried to Gibraltar for embarkation on Eagle. It is practically unheard of for a squadron to have aircraft with consecutive serial numbers, but here, one or two gaps aside, it was the case! Now if a MAX-er would build me a fake pylon Vokes filter, it'd look far better...
  19. This shouldn't work, but it does. You'll need to renumber the moves, of course. [Move4] ParentComponentName=fuselage ModelNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_L01 DestroyedNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_L01 DetachWhenDestroyed=TRUE HasAeroCoefficients=FALSE [Move5] ParentComponentName=fuselage ModelNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_R01 DestroyedNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_R01 DetachWhenDestroyed=TRUE HasAeroCoefficients=FALSE [Move6] ParentComponentName=fuselage ModelNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_L01 DestroyedNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_L02 DetachWhenDestroyed=TRUE HasAeroCoefficients=FALSE [Move7] ParentComponentName=fuselage ModelNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_R01 DestroyedNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_R02 DetachWhenDestroyed=TRUE HasAeroCoefficients=FALSE [Move8] ParentComponentName=fuselage ModelNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_L01 DestroyedNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_L03 DetachWhenDestroyed=TRUE HasAeroCoefficients=FALSE [Move9] ParentComponentName=fuselage ModelNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_R01 DestroyedNodeName=Rocket_Pylon_R03 DetachWhenDestroyed=TRUE HasAeroCoefficients=FALSE
  20. File Name: Spitfire MkVb, Op. Spotter, March 1942 File Submitter: ndicki File Submitted: 07 June 2011 File Category: SF2 Series Add On Aircraft Spitfire MkVb, No.249 Sqn RAF, Takali, Malta, March 1942 Malta stands in a key position in the middle of the Mediterranean, between Sicily and Libya, right on the main supply route for Axis forces in North Africa. For this reason, it came under constant attack from mid-1940 until late 1942 when the Allies took the initiative in North Africa. This is the longest siege in both British and Maltese history, and on 15th April 1942 King George VI awarded the island with the George Cross as a token of respect for its dogged and determined resistance. Initially, Malta was defended only by a handful of worn out Hurricanes which nonetheless gave a good account of themselves, but they were clearly not a match for the latest Bf109F fighters deployed by the Luftwaffe. The choice was simple - supply the island with Spitfires, or lose it. The difficult part of the operation involved actually getting the Spitfires to Malta in the first place. Shipping was being lost at an alarming rate, yet with the limited range of the Spitfire, flying them from Gibraltar was impossible. Finally, an underbelly slipper tank was designed, and a plan began to come together. The aircraft would be carried aboard HMS Eagle to a point off the Algerian coast from which they would be able to reach Malta with their last drops of fuel. The Spitfires were shipped to Gibraltar, assembled and made ready. The Eagle took them aboard and sailed to the fly-off point, dangerously close to a hostile coast... Only to find that the extra fuel tanks would not work owing to an undetected air-lock. The Navy was furious... On the second attempt on 7th March 1942, however, all aircraft bar one with fuel feed trouble took off successfully under the command of S/L Stan Grant, and flew the 660 mile journey to Malta without mishap. The way was open and Malta would survive. By the time the next delivery of a further 9 Spitfires took place two weeks later, only two of this initial batch were still airworthy. Serial numbers in this pack correspond to the aircraft used in Operation Spotter. All 16 were newly-built MkVb(T) aircraft, which explains their consecutive serial numbers. They were delivered in the typical Desert scheme of Midstone, Dark Earth and Azure Blue, and at the time of their epic flight, they did not yet carry individual letters. I have assigned these letters on a purely hypothetical basis as I have not been able to determine if they were in fact carried during service with 249 Sqn or not. For use ONLY with SF2 including the Israel Expansion Pack. This will NOT work if you do not have the stock TW Spitfires installed and working. Includes 2048 and 1024 size skin sheets. Credits: Model by Third Wire Flight Dynamics by ShrikeHawk based on TW Spitfire MkIXc Cockpit by Kesselbrut Skin, decals, data.ini modifications, formations, sounds and assembly by ndicki Guns by AvHistory Click here to download this file
  21. What, like this one? The one above is NOT a Luftwaffe machine, but a Croatian National Air Force one. This one below is from 15./JG 52. Enjoy, as the Yanks would say!
  22. Well, I've just had a look, and it is there... Except it is, well, somewhat symbolic. That is fine, given that the terrain seems to have been built with more up-to-date concerns in mind, with US air bases in Sicily and the Evil Ones living in Libya. If I were an Apache or Typhoon pilot, I'd be on that bit of terrain all day! But for WW2 Malta, it would need to be much more accurate...
  23. Version

    185 downloads

    Spitfire MkVb, No.249 Sqn RAF, Takali, Malta, March 1942 Malta stands in a key position in the middle of the Mediterranean, between Sicily and Libya, right on the main supply route for Axis forces in North Africa. For this reason, it came under constant attack from mid-1940 until late 1942 when the Allies took the initiative in North Africa. This is the longest siege in both British and Maltese history, and on 15th April 1942 King George VI awarded the island with the George Cross as a token of respect for its dogged and determined resistance. Initially, Malta was defended only by a handful of worn out Hurricanes which nonetheless gave a good account of themselves, but they were clearly not a match for the latest Bf109F fighters deployed by the Luftwaffe. The choice was simple - supply the island with Spitfires, or lose it. The difficult part of the operation involved actually getting the Spitfires to Malta in the first place. Shipping was being lost at an alarming rate, yet with the limited range of the Spitfire, flying them from Gibraltar was impossible. Finally, an underbelly slipper tank was designed, and a plan began to come together. The aircraft would be carried aboard HMS Eagle to a point off the Algerian coast from which they would be able to reach Malta with their last drops of fuel. The Spitfires were shipped to Gibraltar, assembled and made ready. The Eagle took them aboard and sailed to the fly-off point, dangerously close to a hostile coast... Only to find that the extra fuel tanks would not work owing to an undetected air-lock. The Navy was furious... On the second attempt on 7th March 1942, however, all aircraft bar one with fuel feed trouble took off successfully under the command of S/L Stan Grant, and flew the 660 mile journey to Malta without mishap. The way was open and Malta would survive. By the time the next delivery of a further 9 Spitfires took place two weeks later, only two of this initial batch were still airworthy. Serial numbers in this pack correspond to the aircraft used in Operation Spotter. All 16 were newly-built MkVb(T) aircraft, which explains their consecutive serial numbers. They were delivered in the typical Desert scheme of Midstone, Dark Earth and Azure Blue, and at the time of their epic flight, they did not yet carry individual letters. I have assigned these letters on a purely hypothetical basis as I have not been able to determine if they were in fact carried during service with 249 Sqn or not. For use ONLY with SF2 including the Israel Expansion Pack. This will NOT work if you do not have the stock TW Spitfires installed and working. Includes 2048 and 1024 size skin sheets. Credits: Model by Third Wire Flight Dynamics by ShrikeHawk based on TW Spitfire MkIXc Cockpit by Kesselbrut Skin, decals, data.ini modifications, formations, sounds and assembly by ndicki Guns by AvHistory
  24. Of course! It's on the list - Further MkVBs and VCs from 126 and 249 Sqns. I'm just doing things more-or-less chronologically. Thanks - didn't know that!
×

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use, Privacy Policy, and We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue..