VincentThacker
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Everything posted by VincentThacker
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I get a big black shadow in the opposite side of the sky just before sunrise or immediately after sunset. It seems to be coming from the "Long Distance Terrain Shadows" feature, because it disappears when I turn it off. I know that Kerbin/Earth itself is supposed to cast a shadow at sunrise and sunset, but the shape, position and color here seems completely off, especially ay 14 km altitude. Is there any way to fix/reduce this? The below screenshot is taken right after sunset and the shadow is in the East. Link on Github
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I built a small plane powered by electric ducted fans and a few RTGs, which is capable of infinite flight. I was flying it on long flights around Kerbin where I set MechJeb to cruise at 4000 m altitude. I noticed something interesting, which is that the maximum cruise speed decreases as latitude increases. At the equator, it could cruise at 280 m/s but this speed gradually drops to 250 m/s at 60° latitude, which is a difference of more than 10%. As I flew back towards the equator, it gradually increased back up to 280 m/s. Even more interestingly, the blade pitch at which this maximum cruise speed occurs decreases from 49° at the equator to 46° at 60° latitude. The electric motors are always at constant (maximum) RPM and the mass of the aircraft is strictly constant as no fuel is involved at all. This is not an issue of bad controls as the plane is just not physically capable of cruising at 280 m/s at 60° latitude. I think the reason has to do with the temperature, pressure and density of air varying with latitude. Can anyone explain?
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There is a way to get scatterer working on RSS. Firstly, go into the scatterer planet folder and notice that there is a folder for each stock celestial. Inside are three files with the .half extension together with a config. Some celestials such as Kerbin have separate folders for atmo and ocean. Take note of the file and folder structure. Download RSSVE, extract it, dig inside and you will find the same .half files and configs for the RSS celestials but arranged differently. Move them into the scatterer folder and put them into the same structure as the stock celestials. Using a text editor, open every config file and update every file path inside to the correct one. You can delete the stock celestials folders afterwards. Finally, replace any other applicable file (I believe there are a few) with the versions from RSSVE Start KSP and you are good to go. Check all the celestials to make sure they work. It will be fairly obvious if you made a mistake somewhere. I would send a link with the above all done, but unfortunately I am away from my desktop now. Other visual enhancement mods working are PlanetShine, custom skybox with TextureReplacer, and RealPlume, which makes engines look beautiful. Hope this helps.
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Spike at poles of planet
VincentThacker replied to VincentThacker's topic in KSP1 Modelling and Texturing Discussion
Ah, I sort-of figured it out by experimenting with different values for the top and bottom row of pixels. Thanks for confirming! -
Hi, I have created a custom celestial in Kopernicus, but there is an annoying problem which is a spike at the north pole of the planet as shown in the image above. I am using dds 4096x2048 textures. I have already tried making the poles completely flat. How do I fix this?
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Yes, yes and yes, I did read through the entire documentation and I am clear what the ICRF is and how to transform coordinates. I looked through the files again and I realized I accidentally mixed up some values. The original values provided are indeed consistent. Maybe I did not explain it clearly enough. I prefer KSP's skybox to be aligned with the ecliptic instead of Earth's equator. In reality it doesn't matter whether we use the ecliptic or equator, but in KSP there is a definite direction that is upwards. Therefore I rotated all the vectors in the gravity_model.cfg and initial_state_jd_2433282_500000000.cfg files. It is the exact same system, just tilted back by 23 degrees so that the orbit of Earth is in the horizontal plane of the skybox. Link here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1gjgRcA_bMposrlMfnkW6zvEwJdCQkeL Tested and working. Let the truth speak for itself before calling what I did "incorrect". TLDR: By default, Principia aligns the solar system such that the Earth's equator is in the horizontal plane of the universe. This modification aligns the ecliptic to the horizontal plane of the universe instead. It is a mostly cosmetic change to the orientation of the skybox.
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The Name Change Thread (WARNING! ONE TIME ONLY!)
VincentThacker replied to Souper's topic in Kerbal Network
Hi, can you please change my name to VincentThacker? I am standardizing my username across different platforms. Thanks -
Heatshields and spinning
VincentThacker replied to martinborgen's topic in KSP1 Gameplay Questions and Tutorials
Thanks a lot! I could not understand why my Eve lander suddenly started rolling uncontrollably at a certain point during atmospheric entry. I even edited the craft file to make sure that all the identical parts (such as multiple groups of legs and parachutes placed with symmetry) were placed at exactly the same height along the vertical axis, ensuring that the craft had complete cylindrical symmetry. I was at my wit's end until I found your solution. I turned off SAS and it stopped. You made my day. +1 -
So my probe finally reached its destination, Jool. It came in on a regular intercept path, and I aimed for a very shallow aerobrake in Jool's atmosphere at around 8500 m/s, with periapsis at 195 km. Around 10 seconds after entering the atmosphere, the entire probe exploded. There were no flames/re-entry effects, and certainly no red overheat bars seen during a regular re-entry (such as from Minmus). Everything (except the MechJeb module) just instantly exploded. I'm suspecting this is what happened. Does this problem still exist? If it does, is there a workaround (other than Tylo gravity assist)? I'm playing on KSP 1.4.3, with only MechJeb and other visual mods.
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I don't understand why the spaguetti rockets are not fixed
VincentThacker replied to Luc1fer's topic in KSP1 Discussion
Exactly. -
I don't understand why the spaguetti rockets are not fixed
VincentThacker replied to Luc1fer's topic in KSP1 Discussion
The wobbly rocket "feature" is really just a consequence of the fact that there are many joints in the rocket (between stacked fuel tanks) that would be non-existent in the real world. Mods that allow you to construct a single fuel tank of any size (such as Welding or Procedural Parts) will solve the problem. Otherwise, auto strut and rigid attachment are your best friends. -
post what to do with kerbals on the mun! Goal: 101!
VincentThacker replied to EndTraveler's topic in KSP1 Discussion
Get all of your Kerbals out of their landers. Switch to one of the landers, and tip it over so that it lies on its side. Start the engines at full thrust and watch it streak across the surface. Repeat the above steps for all remaining landers. Now, select a rover. Disembark any Kerbals still onboard. Flip it over so that its wheels are facing the heavens. Watch them spin uselessly until the battery dies. Repeat the above steps for all remaining rovers. The Mun is their home now. -
I don't understand why the spaguetti rockets are not fixed
VincentThacker replied to Luc1fer's topic in KSP1 Discussion
That's only because you're joining multiple generic parts together in KSP to form what would've been ONE part in real life. How many posts will it take before people realize that (stock) KSP is by no means realistic. Relativistic effects? N-body physics? Limited EVA propellant? No, no and no. It is a game. There's a reason why real-world space agencies don't use KSP to plan their missions. There's always a way to eliminate flexing in your rocket. You just have to find it. -
I don't understand why the spaguetti rockets are not fixed
VincentThacker replied to Luc1fer's topic in KSP1 Discussion
You're probably not using them correctly. For me, auto strut, when used correctly, becomes the fifth fundamental force holding my crafts together. It was probably the best feature that Squad ever added to KSP. Also, fuel tanks in real-life rockets are custom-made for that specific rocket to maximize the mass ratio. No one in real life builds "generic" fuel tanks and join those together like "parts" in KSP. It simply makes no sense to do so. If you want fuel tanks of any size, use Procedural Parts. -
The correct word is "Demonym".
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Try this: 1.Open your persistent.sfs file with Notepad. 2. Find this section: KERBAL { name = Jebediah Kerman gender = Male type = Crew trait = Pilot brave = 0.5 dumb = 0.5 badS = True veteran = True tour = False state = Missing inactive = False inactiveTimeEnd = 0 gExperienced = 0 outDueToG = False ToD = 804399.44100609387 idx = 0 extraXP = 0 CAREER_LOG { flight = XX XX = Die } FLIGHT_LOG { flight = 11 11 = Land,Kerbin } } 3. Switch the state to "Available" 4. Remove any line with "Die" under CAREER_LOG and FLIGHT_LOG Jebediah should be back, ready to die again.
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Increase Delta-V of rocket
VincentThacker replied to VincentThacker's topic in KSP1 Gameplay Questions and Tutorials
Thanks for all the suggestions. One more question: How do I add more Delta-V to a lander? Using taller tanks makes it tip over easily, and making it wider by adding tanks and engines around the main tank will increase air resistance during the initial launch. -
What is the highest possible orbital period in game?
VincentThacker replied to Pawelk198604's topic in KSP1 Discussion
It is possible with HyperEdit. You can place a craft so far from the Sun that its orbital period is effectively infinite.