Sunset… Once more

Yes, sunset once more. I never tire of capturing the morning rise or evening set from the flight levels. This time, its over Nova Scotia, just passing Halifax in a Boeing 747-400. The Pratt & Whitney engines are doing their job effortlessly.

Back to basics

After spending many many months working on the larger sim, i had this strong urge to back to basics. I wanted to go back to a basic trainer aircraft – my favorite being the Piper PA 28-161.

It started off being a small simple setup – guess everything starts off that way… 🙂 – one LCD, stick and rudder.

Within a couple of days, the idea had grown into something more.
Here is a glimpse of where it is at today. The credit for that lovely woodwork goes to my good friend – Scott. More to go on this…

20120826-105021.jpg

ActiveSky 2012

Along with the upgrade to FSX and high performance computing power for the visual generation, I also upgraded to Hifi Simulation’s most recent WXR generation pack – ASE2012. I have to say I am impressed with its capabilities. Of course, I find it hard to make out whether its FSX that renders WXR better or ASE2012 does a better job of doing so. The cloud layers are very realistic. The depiction and rendering is flawless. Precipitation comes across really well.

The use of SimConnect makes it even more smoother. The one thing that i used to find annoying with ASE and FS9 was that when the WX was edited, it wouldn’t always render it immediately. ASE2012 and FSX do it very well.

This time, however, I planned to place the WXR station in a location that allowed for networking but also allowed easy access to the PC when i wanted to change the WXR. That has helped immensely. It also serves as a pilot station.

The winds aloft depictions are far more accurate. The inclusion of a full-fledged flight planner is very helpful.

The graphics system was the piece that i liked the most. The ability to install wxr-influenced graphics is a very nice feature. The colors are a vibrant and match accurately.

Before i conclude, a note on performance. In my setup, i find that not only does it boot up quickly, but it also synthesizes and depicts its first update rapidly. Subsequent depictions happen flawlessly. There used to be a small stutter when updrafts were felt, but by following the advice provided in their manual, that problem went away.

The product faithfully reproduces weather when you drag and drop weather over the map.

HiFi Simulations have done it again. The product works very well.

SimulationResearch

Customized Jetline System – Specs

I have recieved some questions of the  specifications of the system that Jetline built. Here it is…

Jetline HellFire GT2 Custom Flight Simulation System

Windows 7 Home Premium 64 Bit OS
HAF 912 Mid Tower ATX
ASRock Z77 Extreme4
Intel Core i7 3770K (4.4GHz Overclock) Quad Core Antec 620 Single Stage CPU Cooling
8GB Dual Channel DDR3 SDRAM 1866MHz 2GB Nvidia GeForce GTX 560
750 Watt Power Supply
7.1 Integrated HD Audio
600GB Western Digital Velociraptor 10,000 rpm HDD 802.11 N Wireless Network Card
Gigabit High Speed Ethernet Port

Every item in here has been designed with some design principle in mind. More importantly components have been selected either to max out price/performance ratio or with the clear understanding that moving to the next level would need a significant price increase.

For example, the GTX560 was chosen over the 570 or 580 only because benchmarks are indicating that next perceivable improvement would only come with the newly released GTX680 which also included TH2go functionality on board. But the cost would go up by 400 dollars and i had recently bought a digital Matrox Th2Go which would also go waste. Hence the decision to stay with 560. Of course we used a GTX 560 with 2GB instead of the 1GB board that is also available.

Hope this helps…

CPJ

Jetline Systems – gratifying experience

I received my customized Jetline Hellfire PC last Thursday.

I have been an avid flight simulation enthusiast since 1985. I still have my MSFS ver 2 user manual with me. Back in 1999 I started building out my 737 simulator. I am in my third generation of the appliance today with a 14″ diameter widescreen, triple projection system, image warping, with 90% of the systems modeled and enhanced haptics and feedback control. I had persisted with FS9 because my earlier attempts at FSX had resulted in less than a satisfying experience.

About 10-12 months ago, i realized that not being on FSX was precluding me from using certain software given that they were only available on FSX. For FSX though, a high end  computing system was a pre-requisite. A google search for flight simulation PCs brought your company up. After reading about Jetline and their focus on high end systems, I had made up my mind that when I did buy my next simulator PC, it would be from Jetline.

I called Jetline in the third week of May to inquire about my need. It was a conversation that I will remember for a while. It was more about my need and what I wanted to do with the PC than Jetline wanting to make the sale quickly. I got a quote from them the very next hour.  I took a week or so to make up my mind on what configuration I needed and finally the PC arrived last week.

The entire process working with Jetline was seamless. Speaking with someone with deep knowledge and being able to have a conversation about it was very useful. They reworked the configuration a couple of times to accommodate my requirement – all the time ensuring that he was designing a system that would achieve its goals.

All of us have experienced deterioration of the notion of customer service over the past decade. I strongly feel that knowledge and experience have disappeared from our environment. Even more importantly, people with passion  for what they do, have become a minority. In such circumstances, working with Jetline has been a breath of fresh air.

The experience did  not end with the making the sale. A day after the PC arrived, I did call back in with a question, after I had spent a full day setting it up with my software and hardware ecosystem. the individual i working with demonstrated the same zeal, perhaps even more, to help out with my question. We setup some time that afternoon to speak about my questions. During that session, Jetline’s model of remote support was very handy. He not only spent time looking at and fixing the issue, but took the time to explain the context.

In that session, after answering my questions, he took the initiative to look at my FSX settings and tweaked it for improved performance.

The result –  a flight simulation environment like I had never experienced before. 60 frames on average with the sliders turned up all the way; 30-35 frames in extremely heavy airports.

I was absolutely  reassured that I had made the right choice in choosing Jetline.

I want to thank Jetline for their help. I want to commend Jetline for their distinctive focus on specialized systems especially in a commodity market and, further, for committing themselves to customer service.

Overall it has been a very gratifying experience…

CPJ

Prosim737 – relentless innovation

Last month i mustered up the courage to make the move to FSX. I say that because on one hand, i knew that i had to do it sometime. On the other hand,i also knew it was a daunting task. Everything was working fine on my FS9 setup. Indeed the machine was slowing down. But the sim was very much usable. I had wrap around visuals, triple projection, most of the systems  modeled.. Was there any need to change? Why disturb something that was not broken??

I would have to purchase some of the add-ons again, traffic, weather, terrain, airports – well no – airports i could use as is because the purchase came with FS9 and FSX versions.
My custom configured Jetline  GT2 arrived last Thursday. Its a monster of a machine (described in a different post). I couldnt wait to install all of my software and hardware on to the new system. Within a few hours all of the software had been installed.
Now i had the task of taking all of my configuration files and port them over. I didnt want to redo all of the configuration one thing at a time. The bulk of it would have been configuring the forward overhead switches and annunciators.
 I began to take the Prosim737 config file and began to adapt it to the new system. I had downloaded the May version of Prosim737 and hadnt installed it on my FS9 system. I did one and it worked. I began to cut and paste the others. It was going to be a tedious task. So i loaded up the software and decided that i would just do it once more on the config screen itself.
When i began to do that, I discovered  a “A” button next to switches and indicators…  Hadnt seen that before. So i tried it… Well… It worked like a charm. Click a switch. Click the A button next to the functionality that you want to associate it with.
The auto-detection feature with indicators is even better. 7 passes and no more – to detect the right annunciator, i have FDS SYS3 enabled directly on Prosim737. The algorithm uses elimination to hone in on the right annunciator.
Using the auto-confguration feature, i had the entire overhead configured in less than an 45 mins.
Hats off to Marty and Hanne for relentlessly innovating thier product. Most importantly, despite thier relentless innovation, they produce reliable software each release.
CPJ

Lake Geneva, IL

On a recent flight, overflew Lake Geneva, IL. Beautiful sight. Janesville airport is also seen in one of the pictures.

Lake Geneva

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The plains in Illinois….

 

 

 

 

 

Janesville Airport is seen in the background. Southern Wisconsin is very nice patch to fly over, green all over.

KJVL