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hushus100  New Forum Member Joined: 14 Feb 2004 Total posts: 45 Age: 30 Gender: Male
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Hi , I see nobody answer my subject in this link http://forums.surclaro.com/ftopic6790.html
I dont know why?
any way see this picture i took flight from jeddah to ryiadh and i went up to 10000 feet .
is this hight real ?
in other conutries like India or other places there is a diffrence .
alson in fs2002 will see it real .
is there any saloution for that .
thank you ...
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groundsquirrel  Forum Moderator - Master member Joined: 10 Mar 2004 Total posts: 3652 Location: Navarre,Florida-USA (KVPS,KHRT,KPNS) Age: 46 Gender: Male
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| It's a matter of perspective, on a cloudless day in the desert, there are very few, if any, reference points for scale from altitude. When you consider the relative distance of one foot, ten thousand of them isnt that far of a distance. Convert it to statute miles or kilometers (your preference) and you will see what I mean. I would consider your image about normal for FS. 100% accuracy would require a machine only a handful of people could afford, and it wouldnt be FS doing the rendering. We're talking about systems such as the one used by Industrial Light and Magic, etc. And, up until you pass fl180, hit your "B" key periodically to update your barometer in your aircraft.
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hushus100  New Forum Member Joined: 14 Feb 2004 Total posts: 45 Age: 30 Gender: Male
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Thank u groundsquirrel i will try that .
I hope it will work.
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rd Joined: 10 Mar 2005 Total posts: 3773 Location: COMFORTABLY NUMB, in U.S.A. *** KOFF *** Age: 51 Gender: Male
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B key for Barometer????
FS tells me to hit *B* key to adjust the *Altimeter*.
RD
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hushus100  New Forum Member Joined: 14 Feb 2004 Total posts: 45 Age: 30 Gender: Male
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Hi Rd
So what can i do for that?
thank u.
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Mythrilfan  Addict to SurClaro Joined: 17 Jan 2005 Total posts: 831 Location: Tallinn, Estonia -EETN- Age: 19 Gender: Male
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| the altimeter uses info from the barometer- if it is set for the wrong pressure, the info is wrong.
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09El_Boissevain  Addict to SurClaro Joined: 01 Feb 2006 Total posts: 838 Location: Cairo, Egypt Age: 17 Gender: Male
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barometer - altimeter:
They are dependent of one another. barometer is the actual pressure meter (ex. 29.92). Altimeter, depending on the barometric pressure, is the "responder" to the barometer and gives the initial altitude based on the initial barometric pressure.
Including what Myth said.
Captain El
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121a  SurClaro senior forum member Joined: 02 Oct 2004 Total posts: 482 Location: Chicago,IL (KMDW-Midway) Age: 16 Gender: Male
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Don't forget about elevation. Denver is called the mile high city, so what ever your altimeter reads in denver you'll have to subract 5,540 ft or something like that.
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rd Joined: 10 Mar 2005 Total posts: 3773 Location: COMFORTABLY NUMB, in U.S.A. *** KOFF *** Age: 51 Gender: Male
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OOOOOOOOOO,
Very good my friends. I just learned something else new today. I did not know the barometer worked in conjunction with altitude. Very interesting. Now I have to google it and read up on it. Thanks for the info.
RD
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09El_Boissevain  Addict to SurClaro Joined: 01 Feb 2006 Total posts: 838 Location: Cairo, Egypt Age: 17 Gender: Male
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Actually, it has nothing to do with altitude. It has something to do with altimeter, not altitude. You have to listen to the ATC for the actual pressure (ex. 29.92) and set it to the barometer to give you true altitude in the altimeter.
If you set wrong barometric pressure (ex: 29.80 while actual is 29.92), then the altimeter will give you a wrong altitude (ex: 15,000ft instead of the actual 15,500ft) and that can cause accidents and problems, especially with ILS automated landings! (according to FsPassenger's message).
So yes, the altimeter is dependent on the barometric pressure to display the right altitude, so press "B" regularly to maintain the right barometric pressure (ESPECIALLY on cloudy/rainy/stormy days!). Good luck.
Captain El
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rd Joined: 10 Mar 2005 Total posts: 3773 Location: COMFORTABLY NUMB, in U.S.A. *** KOFF *** Age: 51 Gender: Male
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lol,
I meant *altimeter* not altitude. But, I still didn't know that untill tonight.
Your age is 14, is that true. While I am not a pilot, by any means, I do triple your age. And your knowledge of such is impressive, thanks.
RD
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09El_Boissevain  Addict to SurClaro Joined: 01 Feb 2006 Total posts: 838 Location: Cairo, Egypt Age: 17 Gender: Male
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| Quote: | | Your age is 14, is that true. |
lol, yes that's true . I have been simming since I was 11. I was a very enthousiastic pilot so I wanted to know everything. Eventually, I like just pure realism and am addicted to that; now I'm designing panels lol.
Thank you very much!
Captain El
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hushus100  New Forum Member Joined: 14 Feb 2004 Total posts: 45 Age: 30 Gender: Male
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Thank u my friends for every thing but i still looking for salutions
my altmitar and baromiter are ok but the scenery is not good .
and look at the helicopter in my symbol i took it from fs2002 it was in 3000 feet there is a deffrence.
hussain
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09El_Boissevain  Addict to SurClaro Joined: 01 Feb 2006 Total posts: 838 Location: Cairo, Egypt Age: 17 Gender: Male
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I agree Hussein, I think FS2002 has better 'height' visual than FS2004 . I tried FS2002 and was totally amazed at how the deight was drawn, but FS2004 lacks that!
Capt. El
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Tenspace  SurClaro.com Regular Forum Member Joined: 28 Jan 2006 Total posts: 164 Location: KDTS, KVPS Gulf Coast, Florida Gender: Male
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I say with confidence that I'd fly with Cap'n El when he gets his ATP.
No barrel rolls in the A320, though, please.
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