October 22, 20214 yr I came off my old airport tonight and just saw the moon, with the high clouds (moon providing illumination too which is insane), and the semi distant city night lighting. I said to myself "wow this looks my flight the other night." Even the up close lighting is markedly better - I see they dropped the size of those stupid floating bulbs to a more reasonable size. amazingNL by Ryan Butterworth, on Flickr amazingNL2 by Ryan Butterworth, on Flickr Even the runways look perfect from straight on from about 6 miles out....noice! (Note the NXi still isnt officially supported in the MV PC6) amazingNL3 by Ryan Butterworth, on Flickr Edited October 22, 20214 yr by ryanbatcund | My Liveries | FAA ZMP | PPL ASEL | | Windows 11 | MSI Z690 Tomahawk | 12700K 4.7GHz | MSI RTX 4080 | 64GB 6000 MHz DDR5 | 500GB Samsung 860 Evo SSD | 2x 2TB Samsung 970 Evo M.2 | EVGA 850W Gold | Corsair 5000X | HP G2 (VR) / LG 27" 1440p |
October 22, 20214 yr A noticeable improvement for sure. Martin Sims: MSFS 2020, MSFS 2024 and X-plane 11 Home Airport: CYCW - Chilliwack, BC Canada i5 13600KF 32GB DDR4 3600 RAM, RTX3080TI Meta Quest 3
October 22, 20214 yr Yup definitely a huge improvement! I'm so glad they reduced the size of the orbs. However even with the full moon, the sky should be a tad darker. I've changed the date when there's a new moon and the sky is a bit bright. It should be closer to black. ASUS ROG Maximus Hero XII ▪︎ Intel i9-10900K ▪︎ NVIDIA RTX 3090 FE ▪︎ 64GB Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro ▪︎ Windows 10 Pro (21H1) ▪︎ Samsung 970 EVO Pro 1TB NVME SSD (OS Drive) ▪︎ Samsung 860 EVO 2TB SATA SSD ▪︎ Seagate 4TB SATA HDD ▪︎ Corsair RMx 850W PSU
October 22, 20214 yr This is probably something which has been there all along, but I was using the drone cam to tour the streets of Chichester (UK) at night as I stayed there in September and I noticed the flickering blue glow of TVs in several windows! OS: Win11 Home; Mobo: Asus TUF Gaming Z690-Plus WiFi D4; CPU: Intel i5-12400 (Alder Lake) 4.4 GHzRAM: Corsair Vengeance DDR4 64Gb (4x16GB) 3600 MHz; GPU: MSI Radeon RX 5700XT [8GB] SSD: Corsair Force MP510 (for OS); 2x 1TB & 1x 2TB Sabrent Rocket Nvme PCIe 4.0 (one for sim, two for addons)HDD: Seagate 3TB (Data); Seagate 1TB (Programs), ASUS TUF Gaming VG32VQ1B Curved 31.5" monitor, 1440p, 38Mbs ethernet Fulcrum One Yoke, Honeycomb Bravo throttle, Thrustmaster Airbus TCA sidestick & throttle, Logitech Pro pedals, Xbox wireless gamepad (1st gen)
October 22, 20214 yr Moderator 26 minutes ago, captain420 said: However even with the full moon, the sky should be a tad darker. I've changed the date when there's a new moon and the sky is a bit bright. It should be closer to black. I can’t agree with that. Last night I observed a full moon with scattered clouds and the brightness of the sky was pretty much similar to those screen shots. In fact, I’ve been in the mountains in Colorado in the winter and have seen some full moons that were so bright and made the sky look particularly bright for being in the middle of knowwhere. I’d say it’s pretty subjective to each persons night vision. Avsim Board of Directors | Avsim Forums Moderator
October 22, 20214 yr 31 minutes ago, captain420 said: I'm so glad they reduced the size of the orbs. Absolutely! i910900k, RTX 3090, 32GB DDR4 RAM, AW3423DW, Ruddy girt big mug of Yorkshire Tea
October 22, 20214 yr 1 hour ago, cmpbellsjc said: I can’t agree with that. Last night I observed a full moon with scattered clouds and the brightness of the sky was pretty much similar to those screen shots. In fact, I’ve been in the mountains in Colorado in the winter and have seen some full moons that were so bright and made the sky look particularly bright for being in the middle of knowwhere. I’d say it’s pretty subjective to each persons night vision. Yes I agree it is subjective. Which is why it's almost impossible to please everyone with the right setting. There's also other variables that come into play such as display, gamma, settings, etc. But from my end of the spectrum, it's a tad too bright. Here are some examples that someone posted on the FS Forums showing us a comparison on how the night can be improved. Filter off is default SU6. Edited October 22, 20214 yr by captain420 ASUS ROG Maximus Hero XII ▪︎ Intel i9-10900K ▪︎ NVIDIA RTX 3090 FE ▪︎ 64GB Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro ▪︎ Windows 10 Pro (21H1) ▪︎ Samsung 970 EVO Pro 1TB NVME SSD (OS Drive) ▪︎ Samsung 860 EVO 2TB SATA SSD ▪︎ Seagate 4TB SATA HDD ▪︎ Corsair RMx 850W PSU
October 22, 20214 yr I think the “Filter Off” looks better ( more realistic). Out in rural areas with no ground lighting and no moon, you might see ink black sky but even then, with the stars, it never appears truly black. The ground also looks too black with that filter on. Just my opinion of course.😉 GregH Intel Core i7 14700K / Palit RTX4070Ti Super OC / Corsair 32GB DDR5 6000 MHz / MSI Z790 M/board / Corsair NVMe 9500 read, 8500 write / Corsair PSU1200W / CH Products Yoke, Pedals & Quad; Airbus Side Stick, Airbus Quadrant / TrackIR, 32” 4K 144hz 1ms Monitor
October 22, 20214 yr One of the issues I have with OLED TVs is that they assume that darkness is pitch black when in reality, it's usually slightly grey outside. Unless you're in space or a completely dark room with blackout curtains. This defeats some of the purpose of an OLED screen which is great at showing pure black. FSX | DCS | X-Plane 11 | MSFS 2020 | IL2:BoX Favorite aircraft currently: MSFS Savage Cub
October 22, 20214 yr 4 hours ago, 109Sqn said: This is probably something which has been there all along, but I was using the drone cam to tour the streets of Chichester (UK) at night as I stayed there in September and I noticed the flickering blue glow of TVs in several windows! Yeah, that's a nice touch, but there's more... 😉 Try pausing the sim before dusk and slowly moving the time slider in the weather window (works best in big cities). Watch how the lights in the windows change with time. I was amazed the first time I noticed that...
October 22, 20214 yr I don't think the slightly bright dark sky issue (with full moon) is totally down to subjectivity. Here in the UK, on a clear night with a full moon, the brightness of the sky varies with the amount of humidity and other particles in the air. For example, on a dry crisp night is can look very black, but with with humidity there is a silvery white lightness to the sky, almost like the moon is lighting up a thin high level mist. The default colours at the moment are a good compromise I think, but the good thing is people can adjust it to their liking using filters without having to alter the base sim rendering anyway. Edited October 22, 20214 yr by bobcat999 Rob (but call me Bob or Rob, I don't mind). I like to trick airline passengers into thinking I have my own swimming pool in my back yard by painting a large blue rectangle on my patio. Intel 14900K in a Z790 motherboard with water cooling, RTX 4080, 32 GB 6000 CL30 DDR5 RAM, W11 and MSFS on Samsung 980 Pro NVME SSD's. Core Isolation Off, Game Mode Off.
October 22, 20214 yr 4 hours ago, bobcat999 said: I don't think the slightly bright dark sky issue (with full moon) is totally down to subjectivity. Here in the UK, on a clear night with a full moon, the brightness of the sky varies with the amount of humidity and other particles in the air. For example, on a dry crisp night is can look very black, but with with humidity there is a silvery white lightness to the sky, almost like the moon is lighting up a thin high level mist. The default colours at the moment are a good compromise I think, but the good thing is people can adjust it to their liking using filters without having to alter the base sim rendering anyway. You beat me to it. Sometimes the sky here is quite bright, and I wouldn't need the external lights on the back of the house to see in the garden. Sometimes the sky is just a blanket of orange light pollution. I think you also have to account for altitude (and related camera position), the angle of the light source across the simulated atmosphere... Because it is simulated lighting and atmospherics, based on real-world physics, not a textured sky box with a colour that's manually adjusted. But, of course, real-time simulations are limited by home computing technology, so you won't likely get perfection and absolute realism.
October 22, 20214 yr I see the same as Bob here. Humidity or moisture in the air lights up the sky, almost like there's a city over the horizon, that can never be reached 🙂
October 22, 20214 yr 55 minutes ago, dogmanbird said: I see the same as Bob here. Humidity or moisture in the air lights up the sky, almost like there's a city over the horizon, that can never be reached 🙂 Very poetic! Rob (but call me Bob or Rob, I don't mind). I like to trick airline passengers into thinking I have my own swimming pool in my back yard by painting a large blue rectangle on my patio. Intel 14900K in a Z790 motherboard with water cooling, RTX 4080, 32 GB 6000 CL30 DDR5 RAM, W11 and MSFS on Samsung 980 Pro NVME SSD's. Core Isolation Off, Game Mode Off.
October 22, 20214 yr 11 hours ago, 109Sqn said: This is probably something which has been there all along, but I was using the drone cam to tour the streets of Chichester (UK) at night as I stayed there in September and I noticed the flickering blue glow of TVs in several windows! Yeah, that’s been there since launch. Another cool detail that’s been in since launch, the number of lit windows on a building depends on the time of day. At sunset there’s a lot more lit than at midnight or later. Than more start to light up the closer you get to the morning. Edited October 22, 20214 yr by Tuskin38
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