by greaneyr » Fri Feb 08, 2008 3:39 pm
Re the vectors, how wrong are we talking? And at what phase of the flight? If you mean at the start, it might be because the flight plan always wants to go from navaid/waypoint to navaid/waypoint. It always adds in a VOR as the second fix on the plan, so if you depart Wellignton for instance, the plan will be first NZWN then WN VOR then on to the route. This means if you are departing to the north that ATC will insist you head south to overfly the VOR then continue on your route. If you mean at the end of the flight when vectoring you for an approach, FS ATC does a pretty impulsive job of getting you onto the correct heading. Often you'll get issued a heading of 330, then 310, then 330 etc. It's not smart enough to put you on a heading somewhere in the middle.
The runway is dictated by whatever the prevailing wind favours. You might have it in your FSNavigator plan, but this is so you can tie it to your autopilot and have a full autoland. Runways aren't added into flight plans normally unless it's an airport like Wellington where the runway in use dictates which route you travel on and there are STARs involved. FS flight plans don't save the runway info, so you're guided by whatever wind is blowing at the time.
Hope this helps
Richard
Last edited by
greaneyr on Fri Feb 08, 2008 3:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.