Ok, I know you're saying "What are product reviews for
Flight Simulator 98 (FS98) doing on Combatsim?" Well, let
me tell you the reason: believe it or not, Microsoft's
Flight Simulator 98 has a huge selection of Military
Aircraft to fly. For those stuck with a flight sim program
with only a couple of planes to fly in preset theatres, ask
yourself… would you like to fly an A6 Intruder or
that huge beast the C-5 Galaxy? FS98 gives the hardcore
pilot a taste of the real thing.
Now you're saying "What military aircraft? I didn't see any
military aircraft in FS98?" You're right. There are no mil
planes bundled with the program. But if you have a browser
and use a simple search engine, you can find scores of
military aircraft to fly. For those who are too lazy to
search for some standard aircraft, here are two places to
begin your search: Flightsim.com AND Simflight.com.
Still with me? Ok: you're all set. You now have the panel,
sound, and a B-52 downloaded and installed. You're flying
around… man those graphics look evil… Su-27
1.5 even looks better than all those crappy blocks…
and the clouds…eccch. Wake up and smell the Jet
Fuel! Hit ALT-Enter to full screen mode… still
crappy?
FS '98 Beautician
Ok… you're one of those guys who likes to load a
game and not bother reading the manual. Open up
'Options-Preferences'. Click the display tab. Click the
nice blue and grey button with your left mouse
button…ooooh ahhhh… If you have a decent
machine, you now can turn on all the fancy effects.
Now, one last tab, 'Hardware Acceleration' Microsoft offers
D3D for video cards that can support this mode. In the full
screen device, select your D3D card. Don't forget to turn
on all 'Advance 3D hardware options' and make sure the
'Enable hardware acceleration' is turned on. Now, go to
full screen mode again, everything now should appear in D3D
mode… if you have a D3D capable card.
Final point… check the maximum resolution for your
D3D card in the resolution pull down menu. You may be able
to achieve resolutions as high as 1024x768 in D3D mode
depending on your graphics accelerator (which looks
stunning in FS98).
My ears are burning… someone is saying "What in the
hell does this have to do with FSClouds and Wetter2?" From
my perspective, it's no good selling someone a Ferrari
unless you at least give them some lessons how to maximize
performance out of the machine. The same goes for FS98. I'm
offering a 'turbo kit enhancement' for FS98, but I'm not
telling you how to turn it on. Now I have to show you what
kind of rims and tires to make it perform well. FSClouds
are like Rims on a Ferrari…they make the rest of the
car look sharp. Wetter2 is like the tires you can buy, it
gives you dynamic atmosphere changes which makes the
weather appear real in FS98.
My adventure purchasing FSClouds reads like a story "A
funny thing happened to me on the way to the office". All I
can say is it was a trying time both for their shipping
department and myself to receive this program… (no
fault but my own for trusting my office mail room). I
originally ordered FSClouds from the online ordering on
Flight1 Software's web site (it's so nice to do business
via secure Internet Connx) Te first shipment never arrived.
I waited 2 weeks, contacted their excellent customer
support and was immediately mailed another (registered)
copy. Finally, a third mailing was sent FedEx (wow) a week
later until I realized my office was refusing the parcels.
I was finally offered the program via download, which I
received without errors. Many thanks to their service
department… now where was I, ah yes… the
program.
The install went very smoothly. On the desktop an icon
called "SAM for FSClouds" appeared . SAM stands for
'Scenery and Aircraft systems Manager'. This is a real easy
tool to use. Basically this interface is the control centre
for FSClouds, allowing you to use pre-built scenery
settings or your own custom designed flights. All default
'sam' files come with a nice picture to give you, the
pilot, the ability to see what you're going to fly.
FSClouds offers a lot of nice features that can be
navigated with simple clicks of the button from the main
SAM menu screen. Features in FSClouds:
3. Beautifully textured clouds and enhanced coastlines
4. Flight Editor with allows you to create your own
weather setting
And many, many more features…
Remember your B-52? Well, now plot a flight from Edwards
AFB to a simulated bombing run to Moscow in the winter over
the frozen planes of the USSR. Take your B-17 Bomber from
London to Paris in the summer… Or better yet, fly
through storms in a C-17 Globemaster or a C-130 Hercules!!
The possibilities are endless. The clouds look real and the
ground scenery spectacular.
Klaus Prichatz saw an opportunity to take advantage of what
FSClouds has to offer and then make a tool that gives
dynamic weather to FS98. He designed Wetter as a simple GUI
which runs in the background of FS98 that give you multiple
weather areas, or dynamic (changing) weather.
Wetter allows you to pick multiple weather areas as well.
You can choose a destination list of airports and by
turning 'More Areas' on, it's dynamic weather for multiple
FS98 airports. You can take off on a clear sunny day from
Toronto Pearson International and an hour later land at
Kennedy International in Thunderstorms, poor visibility,
heavy turbulence, and rain showers.
Imaging flying your Hercules to a short runway landing
somewhere in Africa on a relief mission… The sky is
grey along the coast, it's starting to rain, your plane
bounces around, it's rough going… suddenly it clears
up, you can see the runway just in time at your decision
height…. You close in on your IFR approach…
but wait… far off you see a rain shower coming in,
visibility all of a sudden goes to crap seconds from your
landing… With 0 miles visibility, do you abort the
landing or commit and punch through the poor weather? Sound
exciting? Now add a Force Feedback Stick.
With these two simple and inexpensive programs (FSClouds
sells for around $40US, and Wetter for $15) you can turn
the simple FS98 into a complex multimillion dollar like
program that most Airlines pay millions for. Not a bad deal
for $100 total. ;-D