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Showing results for tags 'altimeter'.
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What it does Automatically switches the altimeter between AGL and ASL modes as appropriate for the ship's current situation. Looks at terrain both underneath and ahead of the ship, to anticipate looming mountains and such. Configurable settings let you adjust how it behaves. You can still manually switch as you like-- the mod won't "arm-wrestle" you. Download from SpaceDock License: CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 Source code How to install Unzip the contents of "GameData" to your GameData folder, same as with most mods. Why would anyone want this? KSP 1.7 introduces a new feature that allows toggling the altimeter between "ASL" mode (height above sea level, i.e. what it's always been since the dawn of KSP) and "AGL" mode (height above ground level-- this is the new KSP 1.7 feature). All you need to do to toggle between the two is to click on the little blue-or-green button on the left end of the altimeter. It's a great feature, very handy, and one that KSP players have wanted for a long time. I'm really happy about it... but I'm also very lazy. I'd like it to just automatically set to ASL or AGL based on what's "right" for the current situation, so that I don't have to mess with it. On the other hand... I still want to be able to switch it manually whenever I want, since "special circumstances" can always come up where I need to decide on my own what to set it to. Well, this mod takes care of all that. It just automatically sets the altimeter to the "right" mode (more on what this means, below) based on the ship's current situation, but the player can still manually toggle as desired and the mod will respect that. What do you mean, the "right" mode? Here's what the mod does, by default (though note that you can customize via settings, see below): It sets to ASL when you're landed or splashed. It sets to AGL when you're "low", i.e. "close" to the ground (more below on what this means). It sets to ASL when you're higher up. "Low" is defined as follows, by default (again, see customization options below): At Kerbin sea-level pressure or higher: If your free-fall time from the ship's current position to the surface is under 10 seconds. It also does path projection by default, which looks at the terrain ahead of you. So if you're cruising in level flight and there's a mountain looming up ahead, it'll switch to AGL sooner in anticipation. In a vacuum: If your free-fall time from the ship's current position to the surface is under 30 seconds. If you have any activated parachutes: If your height above the surface is less than 2x the parachute's "open" altitude. A few additional notes, for the curious, in spoiler: The practical upshot of this is that on Kerbin, the altitude boundary between ASL and AGL modes will be a bit under 500 meters if you're close to sea level (e.g. at KSC), somewhat higher if you're over higher-altitude terrain. If you're falling rapidly, it'll be higher still. If you have any active parachutes, it'll be 2000 meters (i.e. twice the parachute's activation altitude, assuming you've got it set to the default 1000m). What happens if I manually toggle the altimeter? It "just works". It switches to the mode you choose, and stays that way without automatically switching back. However, it'll later revert to automatic mode when circumstances are "appropriate". Nitty-gritty details in spoiler if you're curious, but the practical upshot is that it "just works" and does pretty much what you'd want it to. Configurable settings The default behavior is tweaked to be the way that I, personally, like it, since it's my mod. However, the mod provides configuration settings in the KSP settings dialog: Here's a rundown of the options available: Enabled: Checked by default. If you uncheck it, it completely disables the mod. A handy way to temporarily shut it up without needing to completely uninstall the mod. Preference When Landed/Splashed: Which mode do you want the altimeter to be in while you're landed or splashed? Choices are "ASL" and "AGL". Defaults to "ASL". Collision Threshold (atmospheric): Defaults to 10 seconds. When local pressure is Kerbin sea-level atmospheric or higher, it automatically switches to AGL when you're within this many free-fall seconds of hitting terrain. Collision Threshold (vacuum): Defaults to 30 seconds. Like the setting above, but for when you're in a vacuum. Parachute Altitude Multiplier: Defaults to 2.0x. If your vessel has any armed parachutes, will automatically switch to AGL mode when your height above the surface is less than this number, times the highest activation altitude of any armed parachutes. Enable path projection: Checked by default. When enabled, AutoAGL looks at the terrain a few seconds ahead of the ship, so it can switch to AGL mode earlier if there's a mountain rising up in front of you. Uncheck to disable this feature and make the mod only look at the ground directly under your current location.
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When playing I noticed that when you pass 999999 m it switches to kilometers and then megameters and so on, but what I have wondered is how high does it go?
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I gotta admit, I've played over 2,000 hours of KSP, and there are still parts of the game interface that I don't understand. I've looked high and low, here and on Google, to find something that would explain what these elements do, but to no avail. For example: - In the altimeter, at the top, there's a little red light. What does that light mean? You mouse over it and it shows nothing. - In the staging section in the bottom left, there's a light that says "Stage" above it. Sometimes it's green, sometimes its purple. I have no idea what this thing is supposed to mean. I've searched for "stage light", and I can find no info on this. I've heard if it's purple, you can't stage... which doesn't make any sense to me. I've never been unable to stage. Maybe some kind of manual would help... I know there's a wiki, but I can't find this info there either. Maybe it's there, I can't find it.
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Hi all - have a noob question - I have been searching the wiki page, ksp guide in the ksp game, and other sites and cannot find the answer. On the launch window, the altimeter toolbar their are two lights - a triangle pointing down (top of the grey toolbar) and a circle (bottom of the grey tool bar). What are they? (I copied an image from google) (In this image the triangle light is "ON") Thanks!
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Is there an altimeter on stock probes? Or, is there a clever way to get distance to terrain when using only a stock probe? Why do I feel like I'm opening a can of worms?