High Altitude Airways Suck...

Forum dedicated to Microsoft FS2004 - "A Century of Flight".

Re: High Altitude Airways Suck...

Postby chomp_rock » Sun Mar 13, 2005 2:00 pm

Not to mention the yellow line puts you over land for most of the flight, if something goes wrong you can make an emergency landing instead of ditching.
AMD Athlon 64 3700+
GeForce FX5200 256Mb
1GB DDR400 DC
Seagate 500Gb SATA-300 HDD
Windows XP Professional X64 Edition


That's right, I'm now using an AMD! I decided to give them another try and they
User avatar
chomp_rock
Major
Major
 
Posts: 2411
Joined: Wed Jul 10, 2002 2:23 pm

Re: High Altitude Airways Suck...

Postby beaky » Sun Mar 13, 2005 2:06 pm


You were the captain of a 747 and wern't upstairs in the first place!  :o crikey. LOL


 I don't get it.
 By "upstairs" I mean to a higher altitude... the first hour or so of this flight, ATC was clearing me to 8,000, then 14,000, then 25,000, etc. So far I'd get the word to go higher just as the AP was settling the plane at the last-assigned altitude...
I wasn't talking about going back to the lounge, although with nothing to do but sit looking at clouds and water, I might let the AP mind the store and do just that. Too bad there's no virtual cabi in this model...
Image
User avatar
beaky
Global Moderator
Global Moderator
 
Posts: 12877
Joined: Thu Dec 16, 2004 8:00 am
Location: Shenandoah, PA USA

Re: High Altitude Airways Suck...

Postby Ridge_Runner_5 » Sun Mar 13, 2005 2:17 pm

When I flew Concorde flights from London to New York, it would first take me south to Northern Africa, then turn northwest...seemed much more economical to go the northern route if it wanted to be near a waypoint all the time..
Ridge_Runner_5
Captain
Captain
 
Posts: 506
Joined: Fri Feb 01, 2002 8:41 pm
Location: Every which way at once!

Re: High Altitude Airways Suck...

Postby jb2_86_uk » Sun Mar 13, 2005 2:57 pm

[quote]
Want a custom repaint? Look no further!
http://www.jbhanger.com
New! Newbie Painting Tutorials!
User avatar
jb2_86_uk
1st Lieutenant
1st Lieutenant
 
Posts: 397
Joined: Mon Nov 22, 2004 11:44 am
Location: Sheffield, UK

Re: High Altitude Airways Suck...

Postby Hagar » Sun Mar 13, 2005 3:05 pm

When I flew Concorde flights from London to New York, it would first take me south to Northern Africa, then turn northwest...seemed much more economical to go the northern route if it wanted to be near a waypoint all the time..

Not sure about Concorde but I've flown to Newark & JFK several times, either from Gatwick or Heathrow. They seem to fly west along the south coast of England before changing course & passing the south coast of Ireland. I imagine it's a smaller version of the yellow line on the image I posted.

I often see the early flight from the US flying along here before landing at Gatwick (I live on the south coast of England). I know this as I've done the same on my return from NYC - or maybe it was Orlando.
Last edited by Hagar on Sun Mar 13, 2005 3:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Image

Founder & Sole Member - Grumpy's Over the Hill Club for Veteran Virtual Aviators
Member of the Fox Four Group
My Google Photos albums
My Flickr albums
User avatar
Hagar
Colonel
Colonel
 
Posts: 30868
Joined: Wed Jun 19, 2002 7:15 am
Location: Costa Geriatrica

Re: High Altitude Airways Suck...

Postby Gary R. » Sun Mar 13, 2005 6:34 pm

Okay,there is one infallible way to plot the shortest great circle route. Dpwnload CIVA.  Study on how to use it. Definatly use the upper right screw on the MSU unless you wanna sit on the ramp for a 1/2 hour waiting for the darn thing to align.  Then, find a globe.  stretch a string from yer origin to destination, select recognizable co-ordinates along that line.  Find those co-ordinates in MS flight planner or any other flight planner for that matter and enter them into you INS route.  That's it. INS can't help but fly the great circle.  Of course, MSFS being not a truly round world might vary from the real thing but I've discovered while comparing an INS route with the direct to magenta on the gps that the INS routing is often a considerable amount of degrees off set from the gps direct.  So, which one is correct?  Simple.  The distance and ETA reading tells the story.  INS wins.
AMD 2800xp on gigabyte vt600l k7 triton overclocked @ 2.3 ghz, 768 PC 3200, 128 DDR 6600GT AGP, 60 gig,5200 rpm maxtor, 160gig 7200rpm WD, Sony FD Trinitron 19
Gary R.
Captain
Captain
 
Posts: 793
Joined: Sat Aug 16, 2003 10:51 am
Location: PA, USA

Re: High Altitude Airways Suck...

Postby MattNW » Sun Mar 13, 2005 10:39 pm

Very good. In hindsight my reference to aiming at the moon was not the best example & gave Commoner the wrong idea.


Actually aiming at the Moon isn't necessary. Once you are in the correct orbital plane and if you time it right all you do is increase your velocity until your orbit and the Moon's intersect. No aiming to it.


But the atmosphere moves with the planet - if it didnt then we would be constantly barraged with a 465.4 ms-1 (mach 1.4) wind blowing from the east!!!! which we obviously dont! (imagin having that as a tailwind) therefore the destination's position does not alter! also think about it - if that was so, how would a helicopter hover!?

John


This is only partially true. The atmosphere does lag somewhat. That's what accounts for much of our weather and especially the differences between northern hemisphere weather patterns and southern ones.
In Memory of John Consterdine (FS Tipster)1962-2003
User avatar
MattNW
Major
Major
 
Posts: 1705
Joined: Tue Mar 25, 2003 2:34 pm
Location: Indiana

Previous

Return to FS 2004 - A Century of Flight

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 167 guests