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Distant Memories

PostPosted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 10:11 pm
by GlobalHobo
As the sun pulls away from the shore and our ship sinks slowly in the west...

Earlier this month I remembered the Titanic anniversary by going for a virtual float in FS9.

This is the RMS Titanic by Mitsuya Hamaguchi (Hama). He's done a number of fine ship models. This one was released for FSX, but works quite well in FS9, too. I've done a lot of port-overs of my favorite FS9 models to FSX. This is the first time I've gone in the other direction.

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Re: Distant Memories

PostPosted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 10:41 pm
by Hawkeye07
So where can these beauties be found?

Re: Distant Memories

PostPosted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 11:04 pm
by Flacke
Did you make it back to Port ? or do they ALL sink!

Re: Distant Memories

PostPosted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 11:26 pm
by GlobalHobo
Hawkeye07 wrote:So where can these beauties be found?


I downloaded the ship from flightsim.com.
http://www.flightsim.com/vbfs/fslib.php ... d=46834375

It's probably available elsewhere. As for sinking, I let the sim run all day at normal speed. Once leaving Southampton and turning west, I made about 24 knots and "left the bridge." I returned occasionally for corse corrections. By the end of the day I'd made Land's End, where I called it. But there's some iceberg scenery for FSX which I'll try at some point. Who knows...

Re: Distant Memories

PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 3:58 am
by Dave T
Wow that's really stunning.

Re: Distant Memories

PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 5:20 am
by Fozzer
GlobalHobo wrote:As the sun pulls away from the shore and our ship sinks slowly in the west...


I'm pretty sure the Titanic sank slowly in the North!... :think: ...!

Bloody Icebergs in the way!.... :o ....!

Paul...sinking my teeth slowly into today's mid-day Dinner.... :dance: ....!

Re: Distant Memories

PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 6:58 am
by B0ikat
Fozzer wrote:
GlobalHobo wrote:As the sun pulls away from the shore and our ship sinks slowly in the west...


I'm pretty sure the Titanic sank slowly in the North!... :think: ...! ...


That's the opening line to an oldie: Spike Jones' "Hawaiian War Chant" :P

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q7swR8MATA0

Re: Distant Memories

PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 7:54 am
by FlexibleFlier
I don't mean to spoil this wonderful adventure, but the 4th smoke stack was a dummy - people felt such a large ship needed it for visual balance - and I don't believe should have smoke. However, IMHO, it does look better with the smoke.

Re: Distant Memories

PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 7:49 pm
by yancovitch
quite well done...isn't it.........

Re: Distant Memories

PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 11:32 pm
by GlobalHobo
B0ikat wrote:That's the opening line to an oldie: Spike Jones' "Hawaiian War Chant" :P


I'm glad I'm not the only one who remembers Spike Jones. That line's amused me since I was a kid.

FlexibleFlier wrote:I don't mean to spoil this wonderful adventure, but the 4th smoke stack was a dummy - people felt such a large ship needed it for visual balance - and I don't believe should have smoke. However, IMHO, it does look better with the smoke.


The model came without smoke. I added it. After I posted, I started wondering why four boilers but only three shafts. Found out there were only three boilers. The fourth stack was a ventilator for the interior spaces.

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Re: Distant Memories

PostPosted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 11:39 pm
by Flacke
FlexibleFlier wrote:I don't mean to spoil this wonderful adventure, but the 4th smoke stack was a dummy - people felt such a large ship needed it for visual balance - and I don't believe should have smoke. However, IMHO, it does look better with the smoke.


Its a very common myth that White Star designed the Titanic with a big, heavy, and expensive 4th Stack for appearances only.
The Titanic was designed to be the biggest, fastest, most luxurious state of the art Steamship afloat. It was to take major market share in the very profitable Atlantic runs.
Since The Cunard Lines Lusitania and Mauritania had four stacks then White Star felt that the Titanic virtually had to have four stacks to be competitive with their major rivals.

While in Florida on business a few years back I was able to visit the big Titanic display in Orlando. I was able to walk along a deck at night and touch an iceberg that was close to the deck. I will never forget how big and cold that ice was. It must have been a scary and spooky night for those passengers in 1912.
You could also walk down the third-class hallways to the cheap-ticket staterooms and the massive carved-oak main staircase was there for you to walk on . Very very impressive.

When you walked in you were given a ticket with the name of one of the real passengers on it. That was you now. At the end of the whole tour you walked past a billboard where the names of all of the fatalities and rescued were posted.
We all scrambled to find our names................................I got killed! I felt pretty bad when I saw that I was one of the 1502 victims of the sinking. It really was quite moving.
To this day I won't touch anything that says Titanic on it! LOL.