Jump to content

purpleivan

Members
  • Posts

    2,112
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by purpleivan

  1. My latest wallpaper. Based on a screenshot from my 4 man eve return vehicle (pre 1.0) the Eve Party boat.
  2. This one took a while... why did I pick an image with four kerbals in it. Eve Party Boat
  3. Some quite old ones of mine. A brave kerbal testing the huge ladder on the side of an early Eve return vehicle design at KSC. The lander in Eve. Detaching the ladder towers (they look kinda cool... but the ship was useless).
  4. I was up a bit earlier than normal this morning so I made another one. A bit of a different mood this time. Ghostship
  5. Thanks... it's been fun making these.
  6. Well I'll probably be making another image next weekend.
  7. I used it in my first cinematic. It's at about the 1:30 mark, although I cut away from the "docking" as soon as it was complete.
  8. Jeb on Laythe - - - Updated - - - Nice... I keep meaning to make a mission patch, but never get around to it.
  9. Another weekend, another wallpaper. This one is based on a screenshot I took during my Jool-5 challenge entry mission, after Jeb took a lander down to Laythe. Jeb on Laythe
  10. Regarding docking in cinematics, one trick I've used is to record undocking and then play the recorded video backwards. This has both the benefit of the camera not jumping from one vehicle to the other, but also there's none of the "wiggling around" that docking sometimes results in. This isn't an alternative to your requested add-on though, just a work around in certain circumstances.
  11. I had a similar idea with this, although more stylised in terms of lighting etc.
  12. Very nice. I'll have to take a look at KAS.
  13. One of the arm sections heading for KOSTAR. I might give this one the Photoshop treatment for my wallpapers thread.
  14. Ok, I see what you mean about the alterations, probably too much for it to be a qualifying entry. I also a tiny bit of Z80 programming in the 80's.
  15. This is an impressive beast to attempt to put down on Mun, especially as only your 2nd landing there. Can you tell me which "custom parts" violate the rules, so that I can see if the rules can be amended. It might be that they reasonable to include in an allowed parts list, or I might start a 2nd category of "stock-ish".
  16. Sorry... badly phrased response from me. I was referring to your use of infinite fuel to get to the mun, so this particular flight was not withing the rules. There's nothing that I see on the vehicle that's breaking the rules, so a flight of the same vehicle, while not using infinite fuel (e.g. topping up with fuel with launches from Kerbin) would be fine. Sorry about the misunderstanding.
  17. Here is a collection of the screenshots from my KSP gameplay that I've done a little Photoshop work on to turn them into something suitable as a wallpaper image. I'll be posting more images like these here, when I get around to doing them. I've added the images below as a catalogue and as links to larger versions. Monument Thinking of Home
  18. Very nice, even if it's not entirely within the rules. A cool looking vehicle, that's functional and has accommodation for a ridiculous number of Kerbals.
  19. I'm afraid not. The idea is that the whole vehicle has to be launched from Kerbin and then transferred to Mun for the landing. However you can use as many launches as you want to assemble and/or fuel a vehicle in orbit.
  20. That would make it a bit like the Jool-5 challenge on level 3, except all on one planet.
  21. Part 6c. The Party Begins. Once the dust had cleared and the vehicle made safe, Jeb’s crew scrambled for the hatch, each wanting to be the first onto the ladder. Jeb’s experience of similar situations on previous missions gave him an advantage and his boots were the first to make it to the ladder. Finally all four of the crew were making their way down the rungs to the surface. Once on the surface, the job of erecting the flag was Jeb’s as the commander of the mission, but at the last moment he handed it to Malzor, to let him do the honours, which he did with a good hard stab at the purple soil and a muttering of something that had to be bleeped from the TV broadcast. With the flag planting out of the way, Jeb circled the lander to take a look at the rover that had guided them to their small, high altitude landing site. When he reached it he was shocked to find that the lander had set down within half a metre of the little (in comparison with the huge lander) rover. With the sightseeing and surface photo opportunities dealt with, the crew made its way back up to the capsule, stopping briefly on the two main ladder sections to take some†Kabbey Road†style group shots, before re-entering the “Hitchhiker†module. Malzor then closed the hatch, chuckling slightly insanely as he did so. In Part 6d. A Triumphant Return. - - - Updated - - - Part 6d. A Triumphant Return. With the lander prepared for liftoff, the full fury of its 28 engines was unleashed on its landing site, as well as the four landing structures that were detached at launch. With Jumbo-64 fuel tanks being dropped off like rapidly drunk, empty beer cans, the huge vehicle clawed its way upward through the Eve soup. Once the Mainsail and Skipper stages had done their work, the center tank, powered by four Aerospikes, continued the struggle of might against matter. With that stage finished, a pair of Mk-55 “Thuds†carried the vehicle through the upper atmosphere, leaving the final stage , powered by two tiny “Twitch†engines to power the rendezvous with the return ship. Once safely in orbit, the crew took a look at their landing site via the camera on the rover (which had been moved to a safe distance prior to their ascent) to see the mass of wreckage they had left behind on the surface, with the KSP flag standing proudly next to it. After docking with the return vehicle, the partying began in earnest, lasting until the time came for the burn back to Kerbin. On their arrival in Kerbin orbit, the Hitchhiker module detached from the return vehicle and burned the Twitches to de-orbit. The blue hues of the Kerbin sky blended to the searing orange of re-entry, until finally it was time to release the chutes that brought them to a safe return to Kerbin. With this mission, the KSP gained the experience, confidence and large cadre of risk taking kerbonauts, that they would need for their future efforts to thoroughly explore the Kerbin system. Searching for extractable resources, anomalous features and even signs of other forms of life. But that’s another tale. The end.
  22. Part 6b. The Party Has Landed Prior to their launch from Kerbin, two robotic rovers had been dispatched to Eve to search for a high altitude landing site, which would provide a reasonably large and flat area for the landing, plus a high altitude location for the ascent to orbit. After months of searching, one of the rovers found a suitable site, at an altitude of 6000m and was parked at one end of the plateau to act as a positional marker for the manned landing. On their arrival in Eve orbit, Jeb and his crew acquired the beacon signal from the rover and set about preparing the lander for its descent to the surface. The first action was to transfer all fuel from one of the transfer vehicles to the other, which would later be their return vehicle to Kerbin. Secondly the transfer vehicles were detached and the one which was not required for the return trip was pushed into a slightly lower orbit using its RCS. Finally the time came to fire up the engines beneath them in the lander and at that moment the crew realised just what kind of machine it was they were riding. The massive collection of Mainsail’s, Skippers and Aerospikes blasted furiously during the de-orbit burn, quickly putting them on course for the location of the rover. After several minutes the friction with Eve’s dense atmosphere turned the “Party Boat†into a massive fireball, streaking along the equator. Once the vehicle had decelerated to a safe velocity, the enormous collection of parachutes were released, carrying the vehicle gently down towards the landing site. But the descent was not gentle enough for Jeb to be happy with it, when the aim was to set down a 1200 ton lander, so at the last moment he blasted the engines to bring the vehicle in for the softest of landings. In Part 6c. The Party Begins.
  23. Part 6a. The Eve Party Boat In part due to Malzor Kerman’s oversight in not planted a KSP flag in the soil of Eve, but also due to other kerbonauts desire to visit the strange world, a new mission was started, to send an even larger vehicle to the planet. With the new lander, nicknamed the “Eve party Boat†due to its capacity for a crew of four, the design team of the KSP went all out. It dwarfed even Malzor’s Eve lander and putting down something the size of a large apartment block on Eve was going to be a real test of the crew’s skills. For that reason it was decided to put their most experienced kerbonaut, Jebediah Kerman, in command of the mission. As Malzor Kerman felt he had unfinished business on Eve he persuaded the senior management of the program to give him a break over the flag incident and the unlucky member of the previous mission was added to the crew. The launch of the lander from KSC was an awesome sight, turning daylight into even brighter daylight. After all stages of the massive lifting vehicle were spent, the lander was placed in a 150km orbit of Kerbin. This was followed by the visit of six large fuel vehicles, some sent from the Kerbin Orbital Station (KOS), others launched from KSC. Additionally two transfer vehicles, each equipped with 6 nuclear engines were despatched from KSC to provide the propulsion to Eve. With the fuel tanks full and the lockers crammed with a variety of tasty snacks, including some Kerby Krisps that a launch technician stashed onboard as a last minute prank, the transfer vehicles ignited their twelve engines and they set off for Eve. In Part 6b. The Party Has Landed.
  24. Here's a Dropbox link for the 1080p version. Thinking of Home 1080p
×
×
  • Create New...