March 1, 200422 yr Any ideas as to what might have caused this interesting weather phenomenon?http://cobweb.dartmouth.edu/~gridlock/kden.jpgAny tips?Thanks!sg [email protected] | 32gb RAM | EVGA GTX1080 8gb | Mostly P3Dv5 (also IL2:BoX, DCS, XP11)
March 1, 200422 yr i saw it a couple of times. honestly, i never really bothered to investigate. i satisfied myself with the explanation that it's the land texture equivalent of the shock transitions between weather stations. the explanation fit my experience at the time: on all occasions i flew into a sudden blizzard when i crossed the border line on land. for what it's worth... total rubbish, perhaps.:)
March 1, 200422 yr Completely a guess on my part since I haven't investigated, but your photo shows the custom Denver tiles do not transition well between hard winter and winter textures.Along the bottom, left and right sides of the photo, you can see the standard texture tiles and how they combine hard winter with winter textures. The center of the photo is comprised of custom satellite tiles, which depicts the ground details as a fixed mosaic. Since the transition crosses the middle of the custom tiles, they can either be set to hard winter or regular winter textures. Makes for a silly looking transition.Bruce
March 2, 200422 yr I actually experinced that tonight when I was flying into Boston. Weird winter textures all over Boston...
March 2, 200422 yr Hi,I noticed the same thing when I was flying over the state of Kansas today. Maybe this is a 'Month of March' seasonal thing? Perhaps location doesn't matter so much. I just didn't look around too much until I was over Kansas.Jim
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