by MattNW » Tue May 31, 2005 10:35 pm
[quote]I've done a fair few round-world trips - in everything from a 747 down through a P51 Mustang to the default Cessna. IMO it's the best fun on FS.
Brad, you can get round in the DC3, but there are some challenges. You only have a rudimentary autopilot, with no GPS Hold or ILS Hold. The maximum range is only about 2,000 miles (and even that depends on getting the revs and mixture right); a problem if you're facing the huge distances in the Pacific.
The DC3 being unpressurised, if you want to be realistic you'll have to stay down at 12,000 feet (which makes for problems getting through the Rockies). In point of fact I don't know whether the default DC3 will climb much higher than that anyway.
As far as route planning is concerned, best to look at an atlas or map of the world and break the trip down into 'legs' of 2,000 miles or less. Use the 'Go to airport' feature to check out your destination airports. Use the flight planner to check distances etc. before you take off.
It's vital to plan the whole flight ahead of time - for example, the leg from Honolulu to San Francisco is 2,100 miles, with no alternates; no use finding that out AFTER you've made all the effort to get to Hawaii, unless you're confident that you can nurse the DC3 that far by leaning the mixture etc.
My favourite route for short-range aeroplanes, starting from home (Melbourne), is north to Brisbane and Port Moresby; on to Chuuk in the Marianas; then via Johnston Atoll to Hawaii, north to Adak in the Aleutians, then to Anchorage and down to Vancouver. After that, across the USA any route you please to New York, via Gander and Keflavik to Heathrow, down through Italy and the Gulf to Karachi, then Calcutta (Kolkota nowadays), Singapore, Darwin, and home.
TacitBlue, the Southern Hemisphere is possible - but you MUST have a range of better than 2,000 miles. Legs in the South Pacific are 'endless' - not so bad getting from Australia to Pago Pago (American Samoa) but then
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