Lieber Besucher, herzlich willkommen bei: . Falls dies Ihr erster Besuch auf dieser Seite ist, lesen Sie sich bitte die Hilfe durch. Dort wird Ihnen die Bedienung dieser Seite näher erläutert. Darüber hinaus sollten Sie sich registrieren, um alle Funktionen dieser Seite nutzen zu können. Benutzen Sie das Registrierungsformular, um sich zu registrieren oder informieren Sie sich ausführlich über den Registrierungsvorgang. Falls Sie sich bereits zu einem früheren Zeitpunkt registriert haben, können Sie sich hier anmelden.
Menno wie lange denn noch ?
irgendwelche news?
Lg Chris
Dieser Beitrag wurde bereits 1 mal editiert, zuletzt von »mopperle« (9. Juli 2011, 17:57)
... in welchem Jahr?Zitat
Weihnachten... ganz bestimmt...
Ich möchte nicht wissen, wieviele, die sich über die Marketing- Taktik von PMDG aufregen, am Releasetag nachts vor dem Rechner sitzen, und mit feucht- glänzenden Augen den Downloadstatus wie ein Bundesliga - Spiel verfolgen, und sich dann mit Screenshots allerorten einen Namen machen.....
Dieser Beitrag wurde bereits 1 mal editiert, zuletzt von »hasegawa« (10. Juli 2011, 18:43)
Zitat
I was tearing up and down the parallels at EGKK testing the RTO function and while doing so happened to look at her silhouetted against the conglomeration of buildings and the glow of lights that comprise any large airport at night.
Suddenly, testing took a back seat to entrancement. The fuselage has substance- truly a 3 dimensional tube, with the archetypal Boeing nose at one end and the characteristically tall filleted tail at the other. In between, the detail is stunning.
First you have to know that while I write, I actually had to turn the sound down. In the forward externals, it's properly horrendous, with that sensory overloading shriek of jet engines idling up close and personal. Panning around her,
I actually squinted for the first time in my FS experience. I have never used Shockwave, but these lights are aircraft Xenon HID bulbs that actually give off the blinding whiteout that you see only on airport ramps.
Turning them off actually reproduced that cool, comforting feeling of gratitude that one feels deep in the cornea after being at the wrong end of a Maglight. Forget to turn these off turning on stand, and you actually
might blind someone in the terminal, sipping on a latte. Switch to the VC and you sigh in relief!
The radome has a glint about her, reflecting the thousands of lights all around while properly exuding her Boeing lineage. For fun I lit her up- Landing, Turn-Offs, Taxi, Logo, Strobes, Nav/Position, Beacon, Wing and Wheel Well.
The nose wheel compartment is lit with the proximal taxi light. The undercarriage wells are lit with contained interior lights- and I can actually see the difference. The fuselage is illuminated from the lights in the wing root,
while the wing is lit from the light on the side of the fuselage. I can see the light-patterns intermingling- cool! What blew my mind was seeing the light rocking softly from motion in taxi- I have seen the same thing, so often from a passenger window- wistfully.
This time- the lights are mine to control! The interior is exactly light enough, properly dark enough, and with enough subtle variations to accurately portray a working girl, hauling a hundred odd people somewhere in the dark night.
The landing gear is fantastic. The nose has those flattened slim tires with the taxi light playing on their surfaces. Perfectly lit- not just from the immediate taxi light but also backlit from the wing root and belly.
the mains are aglow on the inside, refractively lit with residue on the outside, while the asphalt immediatly under the wheel wells glows from the wells.
The radio vanes, pitot tubes, air data sensors, aoa wings all have individual light exposures and are fantastic. The logo light off the elevators, painting that fantastically right, yet tall, tall tail,
illuminates the shadowing of the control surface, the hinge and the counter balance, while starkly accentuating the contours of the slab.
Against the soft red and green glow of the threshold markings, the incandescent ribbon of the centerline and the carpet of lights studding the Landing Zone; her bulk as seen from behind is unmistakable.
The flash from the beacon below illuminates the asphalt below her, while the strobe just above the APU exhaust sparks in the comparative darkness behind her. The sound back here is the deeper roar of the Niagra- felt as much as heard.
The sound standing further up front, ahead of the CFM intakes is pure shrieking, all-pervasive and head-ache inducing- I promise!
Can you tell I'm smitten?
Best-
Carl Avari-Cooper
BAW0225 (747-436)
Boah, wie geil ist das denn, ich sabber hier die ganze Zeit die Tastatur voll...
Dieser Beitrag wurde bereits 1 mal editiert, zuletzt von »Nico081« (22. Juli 2011, 21:29)
Dieser Beitrag wurde bereits 3 mal editiert, zuletzt von »hasegawa« (23. Juli 2011, 08:03)
Forensoftware: Burning Board® 3.0.24, entwickelt von WoltLab® GmbH