ATC at High Simulation Rate

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

ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby FS_Pilot » Thu Dec 01, 2005 11:52 am

During Long Flights I am often cruising along at 8x simulation Rate. When ATC (Air Traffic Control) talk to me it is at high Speed, probably 8x not giving you time to respond, the gap is not even long enough to hit the reply key. The voice is Clear and easy to understand it is just so quick you cannot respond soon enough and it sometimes gets to the stage they cancel the flight plan. Is there a way of slowing down the ATC conversation without slowing down the actual flight speed?
Allen
Last edited by FS_Pilot on Fri Dec 02, 2005 10:47 am, edited 1 time in total.
Pentium 4, 2.4 GHZ Processor
Gigabyte GA-8SR533 Motherboard
1280mb DDR Ram
256 GeFORCE 7600GS Video Card 17 MagView monitor. Saitek X45 Joystick
User avatar
FS_Pilot
1st Lieutenant
1st Lieutenant
 
Posts: 328
Joined: Fri Aug 23, 2002 4:02 am
Location: Victoria, Australia

Re: ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby FridayChild » Thu Dec 01, 2005 12:16 pm

This is curious! When I set the simulation speed to something more than 1x, the ATC voices don't change neither in pitch nor in speed.
Founder of A.A.A.A.A.A.A. (Aircraft Amateurs' Association Against Absurd Aviation Acronyms) My system specifications: FLIGHT SIMULATOR 2004 - AMD Athlon 64 3200+ CPU - 3 GB PC-3200 DDR400 dual channel RAM - 500 GB Seagate B
User avatar
FridayChild
Major
Major
 
Posts: 1570
Joined: Thu Dec 23, 2004 11:22 am
Location: Italia

Re: ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby garymbuska » Thu Dec 01, 2005 2:05 pm

I have noticed that  atc will cut short some of the instructions as you jump from 2x to 4x but atc does not talk any faster and as far as I know there is no way to alter that so if you speed up the sim to 4x or 8x then atc instructions will jump accordingly. 8)
Gary M Buska
SYSTEM Specs ASUS P8Z68 V/GEN 3 mother board: INTELL I7 2600k 3.48 ghz Quad core CPU with Sandy bridge: 12 Gigs of 1800hz ram:
GTX 950 OVER CLOCKED: 2 Gigs Ram Windows 10 Home 64 bit Operating system. 750W Dedicated modular power supply. Two Internal 1TB hard drives 1 External 1TB 3.2 USB hard drive. SAITEK Cessna flight Yoke with throttles.
CH Rudder Peddles 27 inch Wide screen Monitor
User avatar
garymbuska
Major
Major
 
Posts: 4415
Joined: Tue Dec 30, 2003 11:10 am
Location: Jacksonville, Florida

Re: ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby simonmd » Thu Dec 01, 2005 2:19 pm

The only thing i've noticed, which would be expected anyway, is that you have to really be 'on the ball' and respond immediately or they keep sending "please respond", "did you recieve my last transmision?", etc. This is why i'll not re-tune to the next freq' so I can get some sleep on long flights!
Image
This months's screenshot contest entry> http://www.simviation.com/cgi-bin/yabb2 ... 1197692798
User avatar
simonmd
Major
Major
 
Posts: 1847
Joined: Sun Nov 06, 2005 4:47 pm
Location: s wales, UK

Re: ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby dave3cu » Fri Dec 02, 2005 10:32 am

When you hear your call,  hit your response key (before the transmission ends). If you wait 'till the end of message, other atc voice traffic may ensue and you cannot interrupt it.

If you need to review the atc directions, it's available on the kneeboard.

Dave
At that time [1909] the chief engineer was almost always the chief test pilot as well. That had the fortunate result of eliminating poor engineering early in aviation.
dave3cu
Major
Major
 
Posts: 3141
Joined: Sun May 19, 2002 9:55 am
Location: 3CU, Northern Wisconsin, USA

Re: ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby wji » Fri Dec 02, 2005 11:50 am

May i suggest setting your EVP3.1 voices to "Accelerated". I do.
Last edited by wji on Fri Dec 02, 2005 11:51 am, edited 1 time in total.
Image PhotoShop 7 user
User avatar
wji
Major
Major
 
Posts: 1644
Joined: Tue May 04, 2004 11:27 am

Re: ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby FS_Pilot » Fri Dec 02, 2005 12:03 pm

wji, I appreciate the suggestion but i have never used this program before. I wouldn't know where to start.
Allen
Pentium 4, 2.4 GHZ Processor
Gigabyte GA-8SR533 Motherboard
1280mb DDR Ram
256 GeFORCE 7600GS Video Card 17 MagView monitor. Saitek X45 Joystick
User avatar
FS_Pilot
1st Lieutenant
1st Lieutenant
 
Posts: 328
Joined: Fri Aug 23, 2002 4:02 am
Location: Victoria, Australia

Re: ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby garymbuska » Fri Dec 02, 2005 3:45 pm

FS_pilot
It is a simple program that is real easy to install just down load and follw the instructions and look for the tab to click accelerated voices. I have the same program.
If you have problems try sending me a private message I will be more than glad to help out.
This program is really the best way to get atc to call the propper call sign and I think you will like some of the more personal messages it uses like good bye and thanks alot and others.
Gary M Buska
SYSTEM Specs ASUS P8Z68 V/GEN 3 mother board: INTELL I7 2600k 3.48 ghz Quad core CPU with Sandy bridge: 12 Gigs of 1800hz ram:
GTX 950 OVER CLOCKED: 2 Gigs Ram Windows 10 Home 64 bit Operating system. 750W Dedicated modular power supply. Two Internal 1TB hard drives 1 External 1TB 3.2 USB hard drive. SAITEK Cessna flight Yoke with throttles.
CH Rudder Peddles 27 inch Wide screen Monitor
User avatar
garymbuska
Major
Major
 
Posts: 4415
Joined: Tue Dec 30, 2003 11:10 am
Location: Jacksonville, Florida

Re: ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby beaky » Sat Dec 03, 2005 1:38 pm

Ever notice how ATC always starts calling you the second you rev up the sim speed? And it's always just another handoff... grrr...
Image
User avatar
beaky
Global Moderator
Global Moderator
 
Posts: 12877
Joined: Thu Dec 16, 2004 8:00 am
Location: Shenandoah, PA USA

Re: ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby FS_Pilot » Sun Dec 04, 2005 2:11 am

I tried running them as accelerated wji but that only made them even more difficult to understand. They don't talk that fast at 8x however at 8x they are so quick with no gap in between you don't get a chance to responde before they are repeating the instructions again.
Pentium 4, 2.4 GHZ Processor
Gigabyte GA-8SR533 Motherboard
1280mb DDR Ram
256 GeFORCE 7600GS Video Card 17 MagView monitor. Saitek X45 Joystick
User avatar
FS_Pilot
1st Lieutenant
1st Lieutenant
 
Posts: 328
Joined: Fri Aug 23, 2002 4:02 am
Location: Victoria, Australia

Re: ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby garymbuska » Mon Dec 05, 2005 3:56 pm

That is the way it works. The easiest way to avoid all of the hand-off's is when atc tells you to change to a different frequency DON'T then crank up the speed atc will not call you again. Then when you are starting to get close slow down the speed change to the frequency atc last gave you then be prepared to change frequencies alot untill you catch up to where you are currently at. Then just continue on as normal. 8)
Gary M Buska
SYSTEM Specs ASUS P8Z68 V/GEN 3 mother board: INTELL I7 2600k 3.48 ghz Quad core CPU with Sandy bridge: 12 Gigs of 1800hz ram:
GTX 950 OVER CLOCKED: 2 Gigs Ram Windows 10 Home 64 bit Operating system. 750W Dedicated modular power supply. Two Internal 1TB hard drives 1 External 1TB 3.2 USB hard drive. SAITEK Cessna flight Yoke with throttles.
CH Rudder Peddles 27 inch Wide screen Monitor
User avatar
garymbuska
Major
Major
 
Posts: 4415
Joined: Tue Dec 30, 2003 11:10 am
Location: Jacksonville, Florida

Re: ATC at High Simulation Rate

Postby FS_Pilot » Tue Dec 06, 2005 4:03 am

Where is the Realism in that. It is part of the flight to have air traffic control. you wouldn't get away with it in real life so why should you in a simulation, That is part of the fun
Last edited by FS_Pilot on Tue Dec 06, 2005 4:04 am, edited 1 time in total.
Pentium 4, 2.4 GHZ Processor
Gigabyte GA-8SR533 Motherboard
1280mb DDR Ram
256 GeFORCE 7600GS Video Card 17 MagView monitor. Saitek X45 Joystick
User avatar
FS_Pilot
1st Lieutenant
1st Lieutenant
 
Posts: 328
Joined: Fri Aug 23, 2002 4:02 am
Location: Victoria, Australia


Return to FS 2004 - A Century of Flight

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 359 guests