This is getting out of hand! Now, there are two of them!
This is getting out of hand! Now, there are two of them!
Last edited by Allen; August 29th, 2023 at 17:29.
"Let Being Helpful Be More Important Than Being Right!" Some SOH Founder.
Looking really terrific allen
Alex
Brisbane, Australia
New main texture and reworked the VC texture.
Gray texture and Tailhook to hide radar and components.
"Let Being Helpful Be More Important Than Being Right!" Some SOH Founder.
I have been cycling for two weeks in the area below. Although I haven's seen any Focke-Wulf FW190. I hardly had any internet, which is something I should do more often. It is really nice not to have to check the weather forecast, news, e-mail and your social media for a while. The first day is strange, but after a few days you have the feeling you really have shifted to an easier gear.
Cheers,
Huub
Aeroplane Heaven sure made nice models for FS2004! (liveries and paintkits on which they are based are mine)
Cheers,
Huub
Nice looking spit. Is that a payware spitfire from AH?
Alex
Brisbane, Australia
Yes the Spitfire is the early Mk.I with the two bladed propeller and flat cockpit. Originally these were 3 sets; early Spitfire, mid-war Spitfire and Griffon Spitfire. The models were quite good, however I was a but disappointed in the textures.
As this is the early Mk.I available for FS2004 I decided to do a facelift. And most of the textures I did for this version ended up in the library here.
Below an example of the original AH textures
JustFlight still sells a compilation of the sets for FS2004.
https://www.justflight.com/product/spitfire-download when you click on "DEMO" you can download a fully functional Mk.1a
Awesome! I already have that package, very nice, but yes the textures let it down. Yours look wonderful
Alex
Brisbane, Australia
Some fine FAA skins for Captain Kurts FM-1 Wildcat by UncleTgt which work great in FS9, in the library
After the repaint done for the early Mk.I with the double blade propeller and flat canopy, I now will try to do a few repaints for the Mk.Ia version. Here is the first one.
R6709, flown by P/O Colin Falkland Gray, RNZAF, No. 54 Squadron, RAF Hornchurch, United Kingdom, March 1940.
Flown by P/O Colin Falkland Gray, R6709, coded KL-T, wore the standard RAF Temperate Land Scheme of Dark Green and Dark Earth on the upper surfaces, and White/Night lower surfaces. Type A fuselage roundels, Type B upper wing roundels and Mixed Grey code letters were carried. No roundels on the bottom surfaces. Colin Gray got his first kill, a Bf 109E, on May 25th, 1940, while escorting a Swordfish formation to bomb Gravelines (close to Dunkirk). By early September he had claimed 14˝ kills. He finished the war as Wing Commander with 27 kills, two shared, six probable and four shared probable kills. This score makes him the top scoring New Zealand fighter ace of the Second World War.
The repaint is based on the painting instructions of the Eduard 1/48 Spitfire kit.
RAF Hornchurch was one of my favourite locations in European Air War. I don't want to push anybody, but I don't think we ever saw version of this airfield in FS2004. (Although I'm aware IanP, did one for FSX).
Cheers,
Huub
Gladiator at Malta
Do not fear the enemy, for they can take only your life. Fear the media far more, for they will destroy your honour.
Honestly it's an amazing piece of scenery! Just take off and fly around Valletta and look at all that eye candy. Is that the USS Ohio half sunk?
Do not fear the enemy, for they can take only your life. Fear the media far more, for they will destroy your honour.
Yep, limping home Ohio.
So much to see..when he released it I booked a two week virtual holiday in Valletta, spent the whole time sightseeing by air....it's that good! ...and one of his best I think.
Huub, very nice panels lines on the Spits, maybe a little too much shine for early versions? And only 4 more posts for the huge 10K!
Cheers
Shessi
Thanks guy's, i was very enjoyable to make, although i haven't flown from there in a while, and i dont have a Glad in my hanger either, i'll have to sort that out
Thank you all for all of the pics. I cycle between FS2004 and FSX. I haven't figured out how to take an in game screenshot yet.
Rob
I know what you mean!
I just open an instance of MSPaint before I start flying. Then just hit the "PrintScreen" button on the keyboard when I want to take a shot of something. I then "Alt+Tab" out of the sim to the MSPaint that's already open, paste it with "Ctrl+V" and then open the image for editing with GIMP.
I know, there are programs out there that can do a better and more advanced job, but I just like the simple way.
Jorge
Miami, FL
Personally I like the default amount of shine/gloss. But when you want a matt version, I can of course provide one.....
The glossy version of a No 92 squadron aircraft. It operated over France during operation dynamo. The bottom wing surfaces were standard black/white, with the remainder of the bottom surfaces in aluminum. The Type A roundels were added to the bottom surfaces during the Battle of France, being bordered in yellow on the left black painted wing.
and for those who prefer less shine/gloss.......
The things I really need to work on are the wheels, tires and wheel covers. They look like they ave just left the Supermarine show room.
Cheers,
Huub
A repaint for the Aeroplane Heaven/Justflight Spitfire prototype has been on my to-do list for as long as I have this model. As I had it already before it was released somewhere around 2005, that is a pretty long time.
The model isn't perfect, but definitely nice. However I always thought AH had taken a shortcut on the textures. I was convinced they had, in my opinion, used the incorrect panel lines from textures of the early Mk.I Spitfire. However after looking at pictures, reading books, looking at drawings, you tube movies, reading the very nice Wikipedia page and checking the Britmodeller site about this aircraft the confusion is complete.
As I thought the people who had done the full size replica , which can be found in the Tangmere Military Aviation Museum, must have done their homework, I went for the panel lines as can be seen on this replica and about half of the drawing I could find.
After I had taken my decision on the panel lines, the next obstacle was the colour. I thought the default texture were very dark compared with the black and white pictures available of the original aircraft. Sky blue seemed to be a logical colour, and many drawings and model show this colour. However the descriptions given in text normally call the colour "greenish" and close to sky-C. In the past Motormouse Pete, was kind enough to share a booklet with me describing all WWII colours and schemes. This booklet also contained a facsimile with the original colours. And although the prototype flew well before the war, I like the colour "Sky blue"on this chart.
As sky blue is perhaps too blue I also checked the looks of the model painted in Sky-C. After that I had a bright moment and checked the Sky blue of the pre-war British Colour Standard BS 381C. And the Tangmere replica is most likely painted in the same colour.
And although it is still "work in progress" here are the preliminary results.......
Feel free to comment!
Huub
The original textures:
Sky blue according to the sky blue in the Pete's British Aviation Colours of WWII. Note the different panel lines at the wings.
A shade closer to Sky-C as often described in text.
And in the colour based on the pre-war British standard
Cheers,
Huub
Nice one Huub,
It's also quite close to the colour of the replica pole mounted outside Southampton (Eastleigh) Airport.
Think I have a picture of the Tangmere replica from a visit I made there last year. I'm away from home until early next week, I'll take a look in my files then. Incidentally the number 2 was painted on for the Hendon Air pageant, to make it easier for Joe Public to put a name to an aircraft, all they had to do was look up what aircraft was " 2" on the participant list
Ttfn
Pete
Ah, what colour was K5054 ....... the favourite worm can of the plastic modeller, followed closely by "What IS that colour on the RAF F-4J(UK) Phantoms?"!!
According to Ian Huntley, who was on the case from his first sighting at the 1936 Hendon show, it was a Cellon shade called "French Grey" oft used in the painting of Rolls-Royce cars; a French Grey is in the current Farrow & Ball house paint range and doesn't look too far off the mark to me. The problem is, I think, the same as the Phantoms in that lighting conditions could make that shade look bluer, greener .....
Good luck with this one Huub.
Andy
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