The mapping in those VC screenshots doesn't look shabby to me at all! It's a drudge of a job, but like lockdown, it too comes to an end. Doesn't Max 4.2 let you render the mapping to a texture, or is this a Gmax-only project?
The mapping in those VC screenshots doesn't look shabby to me at all! It's a drudge of a job, but like lockdown, it too comes to an end. Doesn't Max 4.2 let you render the mapping to a texture, or is this a Gmax-only project?
Tom
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Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding. Proverbs 4:7
Tom
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Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding. Proverbs 4:7
There's a Zeppelin-Staaken R.VI in the CFS2 'Combat Aces' WW1 add-on; there's also one available for First Eagles/FE2, made by the A Team Skunkworks, IIRC.
Cowl flap id marks all gone, spec added, no bump yet, starting to look like a Stirling now!
John
(DR/ MAW/ ETO/ PTO Textures)
Keep it coming!
This is going to be really great!
Cato said "Carthaginem esse delendam"
I say "Carthago iam diu deleta,sed enim Bellum Alium adhuc aedificandum est"
Looking great! Hard to tell there is no bump map. As an aside - I like the fog and the golf course in the second pic . .
Tom
__________________________________________________ ___________________________________________
Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding. Proverbs 4:7
That Stirling's a real beauty. Too good-looking to be out after dark - but just the thing for some 'leaning into France' missions, escorted by the recent Mk.II Spitfire.
The Stirling is coming along really nice. Still so many aircraft not created for CFS3, or for any sim. As much as I love the main stay aircraft of the day, Spits, Mossies, Lancs, Mustangs etc there's so many that get over looked but were still instrumental so it's really nice seeing others come into the light.
Dave
The stirling was the first 4 engined bomber for RAF and was in service (2/11/41) before the halifax and manchester. Never realized that the Halifax was introduced so early on.
I have a book on the evolution of the manchester and it is clear that if the manchester was never produced the lancaster would have been delayed for a very long time. The air frames and mechanicals were problematic not just the engines. So while the manchester gets a bum wrap it really was the test mule for the lancaster and we should all be grateful for this.
Yeah that's exactly what I meant about the unsung heroes so to speak.
Max, I export from Max 2017 in a .3DS format and Gmax is then able to import the model.
Dave
P.S. Just make sure in both programs that your settings (Units) are the same as it will shrink the model otherwise.... as I found out, lol.
Tom
__________________________________________________ ___________________________________________
Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding. Proverbs 4:7
Interesting vid for you RAF bomber fans
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYgQlmSQKaA
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XUVPMAVn2X4&t=1718s
John
(DR/ MAW/ ETO/ PTO Textures)
Keep it coming!
Just an observation...
...looking at pics of real Stirlings, and now seeing that video clip of 'First pictures' (eg at 1:18) gives the impression the nose decking in front of the cockpit slopes down from the OUTER corners of the windshield. As seen on the second row of fuselages in the pic below - it looks like a steady slope from outer windscreen edge to front turret frame on the first two from the left, especially. The model looks instead to have a pronounced 'shoulder' there, level with the front centre of the windshield. As if the slope only starts from that point, at the foremost part of the windshield.
As also seen in this 3D reconstruction, featured on the facebook page for 'The Stirling Project'. The last full size cross-section fuselage frame is one further back, meaning the nose - bottom, as well as top - starts sloping in further back:
If you want to take the mesh and redo it just let me know.......
There's really no need to get sarcastic.
Hi 33L,
I can't speak for NachtPiloten, but your observation/criticism, although may be valid, was done publically, which may erk some people (it does me, when people do it to me! lol).
I had a similar observation about this Stirling, but PM'd him in private with it, and NachtPiloten was very ameniable to it.
Cheers
Shessi
I'd be careful before insisting Ted's nose (of the Stirling...) is wrong. I'd need a thorough look from many directions at both the Stirling model and the frame & stringer photo from The Stirling Project. Aircraft noses are notorously difficult to get right and it wouldn't be the first time someone says model X is wrong when the modeller actually had manufacturing details for the original as source data. The photo posted looks to confirm the model's nose actually is pretty good with a shoulder forward of left and right extremities of the windshield.
Still, it wouldn't be the first time someone spoke first and thought later...
Tom
__________________________________________________ ___________________________________________
Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom: and with all thy getting get understanding. Proverbs 4:7
For me I would have modelled it he same way as the curve from the side wraps up to just above the airframe circle, in Hairy'e circle, at which point there is a sharp change in the curve before carrying on with the curve over the nose.
It is, like all aircraft, a hard part to get right which is why a lot of research has to go into each model before committing to building. I have had a similar problem with my Lightning project with the wing shape, everyone who has created the Lightning, including Just Flight, have incorrectly modelled the wing and by chance I dropped on a priceless image showing the wing shape.
There has to be allowances when modelling an aircraft that doesn't physically exist and so the designer has to rely on photos which do not always show everything.
Just keep at it and it will all work out in the end.
Dave
I've seen and touched the 60 year old tooling still being used to build the C-130 cockpit framing for the windows. There is no way a modeller could ever get the framing to exactly match what it actually is in real life because it never turns out the same way twice.
US Army, Major, Ret.
Service To The Line,
On The Line,
On Time
US Army Ordnance Corps.
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