November 20, 201213 yr Except for one comment which was not from the original poster there is no mention that this sim is Prepar3D based. In fact I'm not sure it even looks like it. (It doesn't look like XP as well) Thanks Tom My Youtube Videos! http://www.youtube.com/user/tf51d
November 20, 201213 yr Considering who makes the plane, it might not be too large a stretch to assume that a dedicated simulator might be built around P3D. On the other hand, is P3D really that advanced, yet? Certainly there seems to be no evidence either way on this video. We are all connected..... To each other, biologically...... To the Earth, chemically...... To the rest of the Universe atomically. Devons rig Intel Core i5 13600K @ 5.1GHz / G.SKILL Trident Z5 RGB Series Ram 64GB / GIGABYTE GeForce RTX 4070 Ti GAMING OC 12G Graphics Card / Sound Blaster Z / Meta Quest 2 VR Headset / Klipsch® Promedia 2.1 Computer Speakers / ASUS ROG SWIFT PG279Q ‑ 27" IPS LED Monitor ‑ QHD / 1x Samsung SSD 850 EVO 500GB / 2x Samsung SSD 860 EVO 1TB / 1x Samsung - 970 EVO Plus 2TB NVMe / 1x Samsung 980 NVMe 1TB / 2 other regular hd's with up to 10 terabyte capacity / Windows 11 Pro 64-bit / Gigabyte Z790 Aorus Elite AX Motherboard LGA 1700 DDR5
November 21, 201213 yr I would say it is not P3D. They would be better off creating dedicated software to work with the sort of systems they are working with. P3D is a generic beast so better to create a dedicated software package for the F35 program, that will communicate with the systems they are working with on that jet. To be honest, the graphics part of that simulator would be the easiest part to do, the running of the F35 systems would be the complex part of it, as well as flight characteristics. Matthew Kane I'm Dyslexic, what's an error to you is not to me
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