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Yob wrote:QUOTE (Yob @ Jun 20 2013,4:07 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Cool plane, too bad it never was made in RW
Never got there , so many toys played with during the late 1930s ... come to think they never really stopped did they
dbcunnz wrote:QUOTE (dbcunnz @ Jun 20 2013,5:35 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>No No its not an Airtruk its an airwing
.... hey big D , better hang on tight , this storm is heading your way
dont go outside big guy ..... you will end up in wellington
FlyingKiwi wrote:QUOTE (FlyingKiwi @ Jun 20 2013,7:38 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>I can't imagine the sort of aerodynamic problems they would have faced trying to make that fly properly in 1939 if they'd ever actually built it! Still an impressive looking design though.
actually many aircraft using this plan-form were flying pre and well before 1939 .. it was applying the power that caused the problem .. go the other way and they worked fine ...
Splitpin wrote:QUOTE (Splitpin @ Jun 20 2013,7:49 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Where do you find this stuff ?
The Dunne 8 is one of Ted Cook's. In my old VFR UK I had all Chris Brown's Stately Homes, Castles and Halls, and as a fun project I setup an airshow on the lawn of Hardwick House using all the old flying machines I could find. There are plenty for FS2004, but only some of them came through to FSX.That said, the pic above was taken in my FSX - I just put the assembled plane into FS10/Aircraft, not FS10/Sim Objects/Airplanes. NB "assembled" - some developers use an exe which does not create the overall aircraft folder. Ted wasn't the only one. It is a lot safer to create a Dunne 8 folder of your own and and point the installer at that.
The original search meant a lot of digging around in Avsim and flightsim, but once I found someone who did these types, I found the others he had done. Once I assembled a good set, I had to convert them for AI. Of course those models weren't mine to distribute, and although the AFCAD and flightplans were mine, they didn't make much sense without the planes, so I just kept the thing for myself...
CheersLast edited by emfrat on Thu Jun 20, 2013 10:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.MikeW
'Propliner' is actually short for 'Proper airliner, with big rumbly radials'
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