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While Mr. Savelsberg has been building vehicles from TV series, I have been secretly building aircraft from computer games. While perhaps less obvious, by now I have built all six planes that can be flown in my favorite flight simulator game. Can you guess which game it is?
Meanwhile it is solved:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=jzQ5-o0s0Ao
The six planes that can be flown in the game are: P-51, FW-190, MiG-15, F-86, MiG-21, F-4.
BNSF 4723 leads CP 8646 south through Neenah. No shortage of colorful power as A449 had an ICE unit and quick-patched CN 2012.
Just a short video of me trying out the Origami Simulator on my Nanachi crease pattern. Works surprisingly well! I think this tool could be useful when testing out new complex CPs, to see how the collapsing will roughly look like.
This build is based around a simulator used by train companies for training and assessment of drivers. The build has two sides, with this side showing the dummy cab and the projector screen used by drivers undergoing training and assessment.
After our tour of Daytona Speedway, Jessica, Jackson, and Joshua all drove this simulator in the NASCAR museum. The instructor said that women made better drivers than men.
Armstrong Whitworth Argosy. G-ASXO.
Approaching Heathrow Airport, London, UK, 1968.
Model: Rick Piper.
Repaint: Dave Booker.
Flight Simulator: FSX
Processing: Lightroom 6.
Twenty seconds of the beautiful spring sky over Sioux Lookout, Canada from the point of view of an 8mm fisheye lens.
The Air Officer Commanding 22 Group demonstrates one of the range of Hawk simulators used by advanced fast jet trainees at RAF Valley in Anglesey.
The Hawk first entered service with the RAF in 1976, both as an advanced flying-training aircraft and a weapons-training aircraft. The Hawk T1 version is currently used at RAF Valley for fast-jet pilot advanced flying training with No 208(R) Squadron, and at RAF Scampton by the RAF Aerobatic Team, the Red Arrows. The T1A is used for weapons and tactical training on No 19(R) Squadron at RAF Valley, and by No 100 Squadron at RAF Leeming for advanced fast-jet weapons systems officer training and operational support- flying. In its weapons and tactical training role the Hawk is used to teach air combat, air-to-air firing, air-to-ground firing and low-flying techniques and operational procedures.
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© Crown Copyright 2013
Photographer: Corporal Mark Dixon
Image 45155749.jpg from www.defenceimages.mod.uk
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After an absence of about 5 months, the locomotive simulator 'CN 9633' (previously for sale, current status unknown) is back at Exporail, here on a flat car which is coupled to VIA 6309.