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Journey Into The Abyss!

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After reading about some of FSX's spectacular places and various glitches I thought I'd head over to S28 - International Peace Garden Airport, North Dakota, USA, to have a look at the "Mother" of them all; The Hole.

 

For those wondering it's a Terrain Mesh Glitch in the FSX code - there are quite a few of these types of glitches and errors dotted around all over the World including runways under water, huge spiky columns of rock extending upwards to 18000 feet, big holes in the gound, as well as the more mundane trees on runways, etc - some people get mad about them but I think they make FSX more interesting. I can understand how a major glitch like this would ruin your sim if it was on your home airport.

The glitch at S28 is basically a huge rent in the terrain; two enormous slits that extend down to who knows what depth. Some have reported 6000 feet, others that it's even deeper.

 

With my trusty Bell 206 fuelled to the brim it was time to find out...

 

I arrived in the morning - it's a reasonably spectacular sight to behold - even though it's a glitch - above ground there are two features; the first is a spike extending up to approx 1500 feet, the second is a long ridge of about 300 metres in length and extending from ground level up to 1700 feet.

 

2016-9-27_15-53-41-454.jpg

 

It changes shape and morphs as you fly around it...which is odd and disorientating...

 

2016-9-27_16-5-12-743.jpg

 

Below each above ground feature are the holes - the larger is about 250 x 50 Metres, the smaller is 80 x 50 Metres. They disappear vertically downwards.

 

As you get near them they interfere with the aircraft to such an extent that normal procedures go out the window and we have to SLEW some of the time.

 

2016-9-27_16-3-23-228.jpg

 

 

 

2016-9-27_15-51-53-725.jpg

 

One has a road that goes over the edge and tips down it - driver beware!

 

2016-9-27_15-41-7-39e4fb3.jpg

 

 

Anyway, time to go in...

 

I start with the smaller of the two - the one with the road.

 

2016-9-27_15-54-25-536.jpg

 

The road continues down in a staircase staggered fashion (like an Escher painting) for about half a mile before terminating.

 

2016-9-27_15-45-16-326.jpg

 

And then there's just the Abyss beneath your feet...

 

2016-9-27_16-1-24-605.jpg

 

 

I retreat from that hole and begin my descent of the other much larger one...

 

2016-9-27_15-45-56-75.jpg

 

 

2016-9-27_15-55-48-664.jpg

Down the rabbit hole we go...

 

Deeper....

 

2016-9-27_15-56-40-768.jpg

 

And deeper...

 

2016-9-27_16-0-31-409.jpg

 

 

2016-9-27_15-48-37-915.jpg

 

Until we get near the bottom it's just vertical walls from 6000 feet on.

 

2016-9-27_15-47-18-743.jpg

 

At 6000 below sea level it's getting dark and the walls are moving in. However, it's still light enough to make out basic contours and the colours are pretty odd. Altogether very weird.

 

After what seems like an age I finally get to the bottom - a whacking 32560 feet below sea level! The hole is reduced to about 20 x 2 Metres.  Every time you touch the sides your aircraft pokes through to the other side and it's just white space - incredibly bright after the gloom. Sometimes you see random Autogen.

 

2016-9-27_15-48-36-735.jpg

 

Although we're in SLEW mode my Eye-point won't go lower than this. The whole simulator has gone a bit screwy and nothing is quite working as it should.

 

2016-9-27_15-48-37-915f5930.jpg

 

There's a kind of rocky corridor you can catch sight of if you jump out of SLEW for an instant and back in - sorry no screenshots; wasn't quick enough.

It's very lonely all the way down there, spooky too.

 

However, because by this point I'm in SLEW mode - escape is a gentle nudge about 25 Metres across and we are instantly back on the surface. All be it out of control.

 

A fun trip to do and highly recommended if you're getting a bit bored with IFR. Certainly not your run of the mill trip from EGKK to KJFK.

 

Thanks for coming along.

 

2016-9-27_15-40-13-538.jpg

 

2016-9-27_15-38-56-114.jpg

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Wow! Thanks for taking the time to investigate and share! More than 6 miles down... impressive glitch. Most of the time helicopter pilots are concerned about hot & high performance, not the hot & low! I dread to think what kind of temperatures occur that far down in the Earth's crust.

 

I guess the fracking operation got a tad out of hand....  :Shame On You:   :lol:


Mark Robinson

Part-time Ferroequinologist

Author of FLIGHT: A near-future short story (ebook available on amazon)

I made the baby cry - A2A Simulations L-049 Constellation

Sky Simulations MD-11 V2.2 Pilot. The best "lite" MD-11 money can buy (well, it's not freeware!)

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Guest

Wow! Thanks for taking the time to investigate and share! More than 6 miles down... impressive glitch. Most of the time helicopter pilots are concerned about hot & high performance, not the hot & low! I dread to think what kind of temperatures occur that far down in the Earth's crust.

 

I guess the fracking operation got a tad out of hand....  :Shame On You:   :lol:

 

 

It's strange. 

 

From surface down to approx. 2000 feet below sea level Temps are normal. Then they began dropping rapidly. At approx. 10000 feet below sea level they started to rise so, yes, I guess we were starting to get in to the vicinity of the core.

 

Great trip. Still buzzing from it and will definitely do it again.

 

Glitches like this have become amazing after CPU's and Graphics Cards have overtaken the original core programming parameters. ORBX FTX was handling terrain by the way so that probably changed things from the original glitch. For instance; when I first learned about S28 I didn't see any above ground mesh - so that is probably an ORBX thing...

 

It's well worth getting to the bottom. You'll see an odd corridor of rock - which cannot be screen captured - as you're in SLEW mode, etc, well worth seeing - I was looking out for MS Programmers - I'm sure they're down there somewhere - or maybe it's where FSX ATC hang out. It's an odd place. Do try it.

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Haha nice post! Reads like an adventure story


| FAA ZMP |
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WOW this is such a great capature.


Ron Hamilton

 

"95% is half the truth, but most of it is lies, but if you read half of what is written, you'll be okay." __ Honey Boo Boo's Mom

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Post of the year! Reminded me of the Tesseract scene in Interstellar. You truly raised the nerd level. 


-

Belligerent X-Plane 12 enthusiast on Apple M1 Max 64GB

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Thanks for the comments. 

 

Here's the negative altitude proof...

 

Minus_Sea_level.jpg

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