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Smoke gets in your eyes.

Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 7:38 pm
by eyore
Gary Soden mentioned in the update post that the smoke appears to be changeable with the weather, which he and I later confirmed.

Here's a couple of pics showing some of the variation.

Overcast rain



Cloudy


Re: Smoke gets in your eyes.

Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 8:27 pm
by RSderek
Hi,
The smoke particles are affected by the direction of the wind.
The wind changes with the weather pattern.

regards

Derek

Re: Smoke gets in your eyes.

Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 9:25 pm
by TractorBasher
Does this change affect stationary steam and diesel locos?

Re: Smoke gets in your eyes.

Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 9:32 pm
by sjbaker34
Why didn't they put this in list of updates? :-?

Re: Smoke gets in your eyes.

Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 9:58 pm
by Basherz
I have seen this mentioned before ..... somewhere???

Re: Smoke gets in your eyes.

Posted: Sun Sep 20, 2009 10:06 pm
by RSderek
This has been in since the launch fo RS.

regards

Derek

Re: Smoke gets in your eyes.

Posted: Mon Sep 21, 2009 7:29 am
by eyore
RSderek wrote:This has been in since the launch fo RS.

regards

Derek
I must spend less time modelling and more time playing. :D

The smoke not glowing in the dark is new though, isn't it?

Re: Smoke gets in your eyes.

Posted: Mon Sep 21, 2009 9:39 am
by AndiS
RSderek wrote:This has been in since the launch fo RS.
I always maintained that complete documentation would be the biggest bugfix ever. Unfortunately, such complete documentation will be hard to communicate. But once it is there in any form, people (3rd party volunteers) might be more motivated to write tutorials.

It will not help against hard problems with AI, but knowing where the limits are really helps (e.g., no coupling without instruction -- not nice but good to know, better avoid it and have no crashes).

On a positive note, you could (if someone had time) run a "Did you know that ..." feature on your site. Several programs have this "tip of the day" feature. Not sure how useful it is, it mainly depends on how interesting the features are. The problem is that you need time to do it good. So the precondition for the plan is not fulfilled.

Re: Smoke gets in your eyes.

Posted: Mon Sep 21, 2009 10:58 am
by nwallace
Had noticed the wind direction in the weather xml schema but never actually noticed it in action.