Jump to content

Rodeo

Members
  • Posts

    325
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    3

Everything posted by Rodeo

  1. This log doesn't even show an attempt to load the Challenger in X-Plane? Only the FlightFactor 757…
  2. It doesn't necessarily make financial sense for them to make old cycles available for free though. Also, if they add the cycle matching X-Plane's built-in database, then users will eventually request the old cycle matching every other addon under the sun, it quickly adds up (most advanced addons get to ship with a free navadata cycle often provided by Navigraph themselves in the first place, each usually with a different cycle because they weren't released at the same time)…
  3. I must admit never trying it myself, sorry. It also depends on whether the aircraft was built to use librain via datarefs vs. linking to the library directly and using its API (in the latter case, you might also need to be able to rebuild -- or at least relink -- whichever plugin is calling librain; which in the case of payware aircraft isn't possible). Which aircraft were you trying to update librain for specifically?
  4. Being one of the unfortunate few who cannot afford both a desktop for simulator use and a laptop which I need for many other things, I fly the simulator on my laptop as well. In order to have a pleasant experience I make extensive use of popups, which I painstakingly size and place for maximum usability on my tiny 16" display. The Challenger already saves and restore popup positions which is really nice. I have a script that restores the popup configuration file every time I launch X-Plane, but I may still accidentally resize or especially move a popup during flight. While not indispensable, a way to lock popup displays so they cannot be moved would be useful to avoid this type of mistake. Alternatively, some other X-Plane addons have the popup sizes and positions tied to writable datarefs, but it seems locking them in place might be easier to implement? Either way, whatever is easier for you and doesn't take up too much of your time would be very much appreciated. Regards, Tim
  5. X-Plane 11.55 ships with cycle 1802 (year 2018 indeed). SimBrief lets you use the default cycle (2003 from 2020) or any cycles you've purchased via Navigraph and unlocked on SimBrief while said cycle was active (so you'd have needed a Navigraph subscription in early 2018 and unlocked 1802 then).
  6. Seems possible. One cumbersome but hopefully reliable way to check it might be to try and enter the route manually in the Challenger (or even the default FMS) and see if any waypoints are missing or if there are airway mismatch errors, for example. If there is, then there's no easy way to fix it other than to redispatch with a route that works for both cycles (e.g. replacing any missing fixes, maybe by lat/long coordinates, and replacing airways by directs, that sort of thing). I suppose, generally, always replacing every airway by directs (adding all or some intermediate fixes manually, for example when the airway changes course) is a good idea when your Simbrief and simulator cycles differ. One solution commonly employed is for people to buy one month of Navigraph Ultimate, which lets you update both SimBrief and your aircraft so their cycles match (don't forget to backup your Custom Data folder as well as any folders for aircraft where the navdata is located elsewhere), then cancel their subscription so it doesn't renew. SimBrief will allow you to use your old dataset forever (as of a few years ago), though some people like to repeat the procedure every year so as to keep their navigation database reasonably recent. Regards, Tim
  7. Doesn't look like there is one yet. Use case: programmatically bind joystick hat switch to trims (seated) or walking mode movements (when walking). Right now I'll probably try to go with a condition where trim is operative vs. not, but the requested dataref would make this easier maybe? Regards, Tim
  8. Not sure if they have data for that. Even ForeFlight Performance Plus only has 250/300/0.78 climb/descent…
  9. Also, SimBrief has now added MACH 0.74 and 0.72 cruise profiles. Yay!
  10. No idea, but it should be. Have you tried looking at the wings on the ground in ice-cold weather?
  11. I doesn't look at all like the Challenger was the cause of the issue, but I'm quite curious to get to the bottom of this regardless. Have you tried manually setting stormy weather?
  12. Took me forever to find out, but there it is:
  13. The tooltip asks you to make sure the ATS display shows something. First step would be to look at the ATS display Just this once, I'll try not to be too unhelpful: the ATS display is to the left of the autopilot controls and left of the captain's master caution/warning indicator, above the primary flight display.
  14. Worst scenario, buy the aircraft again! (i.e. create a new airframe, I mean )
  15. Now that you've edited your post, I can't remember for sure why I misunderstood you, but I seem to recall you used the term accelerate (rather than decelerate) originally
  16. In that event, the park brake handle would still engage (but, as you pointed out, there would be no actual braking effect); his issue is that the handle itself won't engage and/or stay engaged…
  17. Are you using a weather addon of some kind?
  18. Arguably you could/should be asked to file your flight plan without TCAS in your equipment code, but disconnecting because you do not support TCAS is not exactly a good solution. Were I you, I would complain to VATSIM about this controller.
  19. You can make a copy of the log and send it while it flight, yes.
  20. Just to clarify: it's not a Vulkan-specific limitation; just that the developer hasn't had time to integrate librain yet.
  21. I thought I heard/read the opposite? MACH 0.74 near MTOW and eventually 0.72 when you're light (my assumption being that you slow down because, as you get lighter, you can fly slower -- less thrust, less fuel used -- while retaining a sufficient safety margin vis-à-vis the aircraft's equivalent of "green dot" speed, since it would go down along with the weight). Either way, the FMS can maintain LRC speed for you, so you'd use that, except in oceanic airspace (whichever constant MACH number agreed upon with ATC). It would affect fuel burn though, so maybe indeed the more conservative figure above is more appropriate for oceanic flights
  22. It also seems ForeFlight appears to climb the aircraft a bit more aggressively than SimBrief does (given same route and payload, 2000 feet higher more or less around the same waypoints); if you were to use e.g. a 250/250/0.72 climb, I suspect you could use a P2000 altitude offset on SimBrief and still climb quite comfortably (SimBrief plans for 250/300/0.78 in climb).
  23. With some help from a kind user with ForeFlight Performance Plus, it seems the difference between LRC and MACH 0.77 over ~3,000+ nautical miles perhapsvaries between 2 and 3 percent or so, depending on payload. So a very rough guideline could be a fuel factor of M01 for each ~,1000nm (or ~,1500nm to be more conservative) of air distance or so.
  24. Just an idea following: When there is no Custom Data available, the plugin could possibly load default data twice, thus allowing users to use the database switch procedure to properly clear the FMS? Just a minor usability improvement I guess, even if it probably affects very few Challenger users overall. Regards, Tim
×
×
  • Create New...