I recently had a person DM me ask me a couple things, so I thought I'd drop some of my response here, because it got me thinking about some stuff.
"What I’m finding with the FDOMFD is that it requires a fair amount of trial and error, but unfortunately, for trial and error to be effective, you need to have a very good understanding of what the burns are, and especially what the secondary constraints are. Speaking of secondary constraints, you need to know when they can be deleted, or have to be deleted. Along with that, you need to be able to decide if a burn can be removed if it’s not needed, or if another burn needs to be added. Essentially, the FDOMFD gives you a ton of info, and then it’s up to you to decide how that info is used, or in some cases ignored.
So what I started working on over a month ago, are two documents. One is a condensed version of the STS-126 OMP walk through in the FDOMFD user manual. I’ve taken the 20 pages in the FDO manual that cover the walk through, and boiled it down to an easily digestible 5 pages, broken down by burns. Then I took the 5 page condensed version, and turned it into an even more condensed checklist style document that you can graduate to once you know what you’re doing with the condensed document. So essentially, a person needs to really study the FDO manual, and fail over and over in the SSV. Once concepts are learned, moving to the condensed version of the walk through can be done, and once everything is really well learned from the condensed version, the checklist version that contains no real explanations other than the sequence of events can be used.
But….here’s the problem. The walk through in the FDO manual won’t translate to every space shuttle rendezvous mission to ISS, MIR, or Hubble. That walk through is specific to STS-126. I’ve been trying to apply my two documents to STS-101 for the past month, but with little success. Sometimes it works, sometimes not.
I’m starting to think that what’s actually needed is for a package of launch scenarios to the ISS, MIR, and HST, that are individualized for each historic mission; custom SSV mission.json file, SSV scenario.scn file, and FDOMFD mission.txt file. Actually, a dual package would be better, one mission pack that’s just the shuttle, with no payload, so you don’t have to download and install anything other than the SSV, and can just practice rendezvous procedures, and another mission package with the historical payloads, for those that want to advance to the next level.
My goal is to eventually get my documents to the point that they can be used by new users, to lower the learning curve, lower the bar to entry, and open up the amazing SSV + FDOMFD to more people. There are tons of people that just want to run some rendezvous missions, but don’t want to put in 3 months of study, and research to almost get there. I’ve been hitting Orbiter/SSV/FDO pretty hard the past couple months, and I’m getting burned out. So I’m actually going to pull back a bit, take a little break from SSV and FDO, and let things ruminate. I’m going to lick my wounds, head back to flight sim land, and enjoy the experience of flying that I actually know how to do….LOL."