October 11, 201312 yr Enjoying The Fall Colors in The RealAir Lancair Legacy. 100%75%50%d8a34be0e82d98b5a45ff4336cd0dddc Patrick
October 11, 201312 yr pics are too dark, you need to adjust your ENB settings. Are those default fsx clouds? :blink: :wacko:
October 11, 201312 yr I do like the final shot Patrick, I'm a sucker for sun reflecting on a winding river I guess. What bike in your current pic?? Dan George (woodhick)Check out Greenbrier Aero Club, the VA for and about the GA pilot.
October 11, 201312 yr Author pics are too dark, you need to adjust your ENB settings. Are those default fsx clouds? :blink: :wacko: Hello Kiran,Thank You for the feedback,These shots are from P3D,No ENB Settings that I'm aware of.I thought the early fall evening light made a nice contrast to the shadows of the surrounding countryside. I do like the final shot Patrick, I'm a sucker for sun reflecting on a winding river I guess. What bike in your current pic?? Cheers Dan,Thank You.The avatar is of a Houston Highway Patrolman on his Harley EL Circa early 30's.Story was,Nothing that didn't have Wings could get by him on the Texas Interstate :biggrin: 100%75%50%d8a34be0e82d98b5a45ff4336cd0dddc Patrick
October 11, 201312 yr I have noticed in "side by side" comparisons that P3D tends to be darker than FSX, and that is a good thing. I have always said that the lighting in FSX when the Sun is high in the sky is WAY too bright. It is extremely annoying, and is why I tend to start most of my (relatively short) flights at dawn. If I could keep the ambient light in FSX to the level seen when the Sun has just lifted above the horizon, I would be able to fly throughout the day. If anyone knows of a way to do this, then please let me know! Christopher Low AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D CPU / 64GB DDR5-6000 RAM / 12GB Nvidia RTX 4070 Super GPU / Gigabyte X870E Aorus Elite Wifi 7 / 1+2TB Samsung Evo Plus M2 Nvme UK2000 Beta Tester
Create an account or sign in to comment