FS2004 Screenshots Here!!!

WOMBAT.jpg

"Guns, guns, guns!"

If you watch The Mover And Gonky Show on YouTube, you've probably witnessed the greatness of WOMBAT(!!). :giggle:
This is my WOMBAT(!!) fan art, showing the mighty E-2 Hawkeye setting up a TU-95 for a guns pass.

Actually, I was updating some AI and I swapped out the Bear of the Abacus Vietnam Carrier Ops scenery package with an updated model from MPAI/MAIW. I used the E-2 because I modified the panel folder to include a working Radar display and I wanted to check out how the new Bear looked without burning a bunch of time to find it. Sorry for the altitude label, that's just how I have FS set up. Note also that the Bear's gear and flaps are down. I think this is due to how Abacus set up the traffic file. :unsure:
 
This is something I've been working towards for a long, LONG, time*. :congratulatory:
In the foreground is the Aerialfoundry F/A-18C in VFA-195 paint, just after landing.
In the background are two AI F/A-18C's also from VFA-195 and an EA-6B from VAQ-136.
Not shown is an AI SH-60 Seahawk, getting ready to land.

The scenery is a custom placement of the USS Nimitz about 200 miles from Japan, located in one of the "big nothing" areas of the Pacific.
There's some (static) shipping traffic about 90 miles to the East, so there is something to find and check out.

*- This has taken me (off and on, mostly off) the better part of ten years to complete. :ernaehrung004:
ICVN68.jpg
 
Well, it feels good to finally have everything done. :wiggle:

The problem, now, is do I commit to something I did with FS2002 back in the day? :unsure:

That all started when I installed the Alphasim B-52 package, which I had to "back convert" to run in FS2002.
It was (and is) a true BEAST to fly. Getting it right didn't mean hacking away at the flight dynamics, it meant learning how fly the danged thing.
That meant learning as much as I could. How to flight plan stuff, how to navigate, how to hit waypoints within less than two minutes of the plan, etc. etc. etc. All of this while using Real Weather to throw some real-time monkey wrenches at my detailed flight plans. :dizzy:

This is what I call "FS Career Mode" and its designed to be both a pain and a challenge. :biggrin-new:
I started out flying the FSD T-38 out of Williams AFB (Goodyear) in Az.
After enough "stick" hours, I "got selected" for the B-52 pipeline and did some time in a T-43 (basically, an old 737-200) while I concentrated a LOT on navigation ( I spent this time getting the old ACS GPS proggy to play nice with FS9 and started collecting accurate flight plans) at Mather AFB and then at Castle AFB with the B-52.
After that, I made some "close enough" repaints for the B-52 and started my Co-pilot job with the 43rd BW at Andersen AFB (Guam) in the B-52G.

Like I said, I did a LOT of research along the way and going to Guam kind of reflected what happened to me in the Navy. I already had an EE degree when I joined and got to be the "student leader" in the first class after they brought "A School" back to Groton. I thought I had orders to the USS Gato in Groton but the instructors hooked me up with "Who knew?" orders to the Barbel in Japan. :nevreness: That's a long story and I'm trying to keep this post short.

One thing I figured out about playing "military career mode", there are times when you, literally, have to flip a coin.
You have some options in terms of scenery and repaints but, ultimately, you have to give up some control over where you wind up. :indecisiveness:

For my follow-on assignment, I went with an Aircraft Commander job at Fairchild AFB in the B-52H. The time period for all of this was during the late stages of the Cold War. What is so cool about the Alpha B-52 is that you really have to log 8-12 hour training missions three times a month so you don't get rusty. Its a VERY seat-of-the-pants airplane and one of the toughest to master in FS.

I might do the same thing with the Hornet and the T-45 Goshawk, but I've already logged a bunch of carrier hours so a lot of those "first time" thrills are gone.
 
That looks like a lot of fun. Makes me want to relook the CFS2 aircraft.
Just the usual aircraft.cfg mods?
Indeed, and Klein has attached an updated model file, in the release thread in the CFS2 sub-forums ( - do scroll down a few posts) that will make the Voisin fully functional in FS2004. Moreover, if you find the Voisin to shake/reverberate [a tad too much] along the pitch axis in your FS9 install (and which is especially apparent during take-off runs and dives), then make the following MOI edits to your aircraft.cfg; MOI values courtesy of airwrench (freeware version, as available @ SOH):
;Moments of Inertia
empty_weight_roll_MOI =2908 //2622
empty_weight_pitch_MOI =4725 //2768
empty_weight_yaw_MOI =6292 //4738

cheers!
 
9Otge15.jpg


oNwHbIF.jpg


A Super Sabre from 32nd FDS over 1957 Soesterberg AB.

Cheers,
Huub
 
The repaint is indeed for the donationware F-100 Super Sabre. It is based on a paintkit which contains great work by Dave Quincy (DaveQ), Ed Wells (Falcon409) and Jason Sparkes of UKMIL.

Dave was kind enough to share the hard work of these 3 guys and I started this repaint a long time ago to fly from the Wheelus AB scenery by Ed Wells for FSX. But when Milviz suddenly made their excellent FSX model freeware and Steve Bryant (Duckie) was kind enough to an early 32 FDS repaint, I never finished it.

Now Al (AVP) started to work on an early cold warversion of Soesterberg AB, I decided to finish it.

I will try to upload it during the weekend.

Cheers,
Huub
 
Recently spotted, somewhere in Europe. :encouragement:

I did a "down and dirty" conversion of the Danish Viper, this is just a best guess.View attachment 124331
As a kind of an update:


:unsure:

Most of the video looks good, but I noticed he painted the tops of the horizontal stabs in the lighter gray.
I also like the older "long tail" of the K.O. Belgian Viper. It makes sense for highway ops and just looks "bad a##". :wiggle:
 
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