Discussion Modeling Boats, Ships, and Other Watercraft in Orbiter? Experiments with Hydrostatics and the Touchdown Model

Check out this wind heel:

Screenshot at 2024-12-12 14-37-18.png

I get some strange behavior of the rudder - it seems to reverse direction sometimes when under sail, and I don't see a reason why. The vessel isn't being pushed backwards, so I don't know what is causing that.

Lua stopped hiding my wind tell on scenario start, which is nice.
 
I can model some VC instruments, like a speedometer, tachometers, a fuel gauge, a radar scope, a MFD (MapMFD is a GPS)... What do you think ? Maybe a wind direction indicator ? The document you linked above should even give me the real layout of these instruments.
 
I can model some VC instruments, like a speedometer, tachometers, a fuel gauge, a radar scope, a MFD (MapMFD is a GPS)... What do you think ? Maybe a wind direction indicator ? The document you linked above should even give me the real layout of these instruments.
Whatever you think would look good would be great. If you could just provide the locations and axes of the dials for the animations, I could animate them pretty easily.
 
I can model some VC instruments, like a speedometer, tachometers, a fuel gauge, a radar scope, a MFD (MapMFD is a GPS)... What do you think ? Maybe a wind direction indicator ? The document you linked above should even give me the real layout of these instruments.

AFAIR, the fuel gauge is a dip stick for that one. Also, maybe a compass would be of higher priority.
 
AFAIR, the fuel gauge is a dip stick for that one. Also, maybe a compass would be of higher priority.

Of course, the compass. I had the feeling I was forgetting something. And probably a roll indicator. I now remember that on small sailboats the two are usually combined into one instrument.
 
AFAIR, the fuel gauge is a dip stick for that one.
Yep. A float type fuel sender wouldn't be very useful in a vessel that can pitch and roll like a 44 can.
Also, maybe a compass would be of higher priority.
Never thought about it, but I don't know if they have gyros for these, as that really would only be necessary for an autopilot, and I don't think these guys have them. Am I going to need to get a compass declination map?
 
I remember we had compass declination tables for our J-80 sailboat. We had to calibrate the compass each year placing small magnets to compensate for the declination.
 
I remember we had compass declination tables for our J-80 sailboat. We had to calibrate the compass each year placing small magnets to compensate for the declination.
I know on the bigger binnacles they have Lord Kelvin's balls to adjust for the magnetism of the steel ship hulls, but I am pretty sure they didn't correct for declination as they were on transoceanic ships. I'll probably just set the compass to true heading unless someone really has an objection.

I've gone to sea a few times, but I'm not a sailor by any stretch, and I was mostly adjacent to the Morlocks in the engine room and not the Eloi up on deck. Keeping the ship on the blue parts of the chart was someone else's job.
 
Doesn't seem to be far off, on most photograph, I can also see a hemispherical cover over the compass, with a small window to read the heading.
 
Yes. There's usually a transparent fluid that dampens oscillations and diffuses light evenly, which helps in rough weather and at night. Like a snowglobe, without the snow 😅
 
Keeping the ship on the blue parts of the chart was someone else's job.

Traditionally, that job doesn't even go to anyone on board, but to Wolfgang Pauli and James Clerk Maxwell. There are people aboard, though, whose job is to make sure that you don't actually make Pauli and Maxwell do much work, as they tend to knock dents into the hull when disturbed.
 
These COULD be switch covers, but I am not sure if the search light controls need them. The manual shows normal lever-type switches. The compass is a 5" Danforth Constellation compass.
 
Back
Top