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View Full Version : Reminder: Google Earth flight simulator


Skybird
05-01-17, 07:26 AM
It has been many years since I tried this one last time. Must have been when it was first released. Back then, i had no fast enough internet or GE was lacking the function of displaying not only 3D-modelled earth surface, but also real 3D buildings in so many prominent areas, cities, metropoles.

I now tried it again after so many years, and on my Linux laptop. What should I say? I am stunned at how well this now works! To me, Google Earth always has been the - by far - most interesting and positive thing Google ever did, even before their search engine, even more so since Earth does so little, compared to other Google software, to spy on you. I now have real speeds of around 11-12 MB/sec with my temporary internet connection, and the textures get loaded fast enough to really add meat, skin and bones to the flight "sim".

The flightsimulator covers just the very basics and allows unrealstic stuff, if you push for that, it cannot replace a real flight simualtor. But it looses speed when you climb, and drops when you turn, such basic stuff. It is not meant to be a mission-based game, but another way to approach and experience the stunning 3D environment that Google Earth allows you discover.

For Germans interesting: since w ehave only the 20 largets cities in Germany covered by Google Street View, you can use the 3D scenery (where available) as a surrogate by zooming in to the maximum. It is not Street view, and the 3D modelling is quite roigh around the edges, still, comparing real world places I know with the 3D scenery, the latter catches the generla feeling and looks of the place wite well.

Very nice toys, not new, but newly re-discovered - and now rally making sense. Try it if you haven't checked it for the past years.

The 3D box needs to be ticked, of course. I also recommend to use the slower propeller aircraft, the fight jet is so fast that the textures over regions with many buildings and houses will not get loaded in time and so the looks will remain somewhat washed-out (maybe not a problem for people having much faster internet connections than I do). If you travel with the slower aircraft at speeds around 100-120kn, it is not a problem, usually, not even in the densely-build areas. Check the help file in the menus for key commands. There are flaps, gear, gas, wheel brakes, and view controls.

Anyhow, a pleasant re-discovery.

Gargamel
05-01-17, 07:54 AM
If you are really ambitious, you can learn to model in SketchUp, which was at one time a google product, and I believe is still related. I do mainly 3d printing modeling on it, so I have done very little with the architecture side of it, so the following may not be exactly accurate.

Sketchup has Google earth integration. If you create a real world model of a structure, it can be imported into GE. I think you can immediately import into you local version with few problems, and the global version I think gets peer reviewed, and then added to the main GE database.

But adding real world structures is fairly simple in SU, you can take multiple photos of a building, import them, and then trace the edges in SU. After telling SU the length of a few of those edges, it will create the structure for you, using the correct dimensions and textures of the real world object.

So you can go out and photograph your local neighborhood, and fly around it in GEFS. I've always wanted to try it, but never took the time.

Eichhörnchen
05-01-17, 12:17 PM
When I finally got a PC able to run photo-real scenery in 'Flight Simulator' 9 and 10, the default landscape tiles were no longer satisfying... I use weather software too, and you simply can't beat 'flying' over the true landscape, seeing virtually what a real pilot sees.

I got the VFR (Visual Flight Rules) Scenery for large areas of Germany as well as for the whole of the UK and Netherlands, but these packages have always been extremely expensive, so I'm guessing the Google Sim makes for an economical alternative?

(I've not tried the Google sim yet)

Skybird
05-01-17, 06:17 PM
Do not overestimate that Google flight "simulator" - it is rudimentary at best, and only meant to be a nice way to skim the scenery.

However some people have linked FSX functionality and the Google landscape as scenery, check Youtube for details.

I used to have special airport sceneries for the major hubs in Europe when I still was very active in FSX (German Airports series , Aerosoft Mega Airports and the like), plus ground terminal services (AES), sky/cloud/weather replacements (REX) and major airliner modules like those from PMDG. Also a few high quality smaller planes. But all in all I was more into IFR than VFR.

Many great memories. The feeling of accomplishment if having done a 737 flight right and correct from cold&dark to dokcing at destination terminal, was very satisfying. The default FS package cannot not provide that.

I never really got into P3D. There are quite some things speaking against it, in the end, after all.

Today, race driving has taken over from flight simming and tank simming almost totally.

Eichhörnchen
05-02-17, 12:48 PM
I've got 'Real-air Traffic' and other softwares (airport and aircraft addons etc) to make airline flying more immersive... I even found an old disc the other day which allows you to follow a "career" as a virtual airline pilot (fs9) in the same way you can embark on a career in Silent Hunter. But I'm always drawn back to combat sims... I don't have the steady temperament (or the brains) to become an airline pilot.