ky
Director of Manned Spaceflight
This sounds awesome 
In the previous century somebody would write an article about it.We will soon have everything from launch control (LaunchMFD), interplanetary guidance (TransX). rendezvous control (RV Orientation), on-station space station building guidance (On Station Ops), base synchronization (BaseSync), autoburn control (BurnTimeCalc), deorbit and glideslope guidance (Glideslope 2) all linked though Module Messaging.
How do you activate that option in the MFD?Plus a whole new vacuum landing mode for precision landings onto the Moon, Mercury, etc.
How do you activate that option in the MFD?
It works good but sometimes, The Shuttle A wont land on a pad and instead just uses hover engine to stay afloat over the pad.Get yourself in orbit around a vacuum body (e.g. Moon), select a base (e.g. Brighton Beach), bring up Base Sync to see if your orbit is within say 100km cross-range, and then hit AP. You will see AUT come on in the top right hand corner, and then select the digital data display to see what it does.
I tried it with the Shuttle-A into jplaja's Myron Base on Mercury, to try different vessels and gravity gradients (as well as Atlantis, DG, XR2, XR5 into Brighton Beach).
Give it a go and see what you think. I know the HSIT graphics are a bit messed up (that's for a future fix), and the reentry into Earth does not perfectly hit the top of descent point (I need to debug whether that's a Glideslope or a BaseSync error), but I had to get it released, as I had been sitting on it for over 3 months!
PS y'all: the manual is also worth reading (I spent a couple hours putting it together!)![]()
It works good but sometimes, The Shuttle A wont land on a pad and instead just uses hover engine to stay afloat over the pad.
Thanks Andrew.
I have allready tested the XTS, and the situation was even worse.
>I.e. I tried to use the DIAG-option in one of he tests before the last one >got a more strange result:
>Just two lines within the new created GS-file which were different:
>Plenty of 201 km altitude-lines (like in this test) and just one last line with >"0" >altitude.
>So everything between 201 kms and 0 kms altitude has been skipped.
Sorry for the confusion, with DIAG I meant XTS.
However, I will test the reentry again using XTS and provide you with the logs.
Btw., different topic....could it be that the vacuum-land-ap does not like Enjo's "absolute-killrot module" ?
All went fine until 2000 meters above the landing-site.
Then the AP descended (with about 1.3 m/s) down to about 1500 meters, and then ascended again to 2000+ meters.
This happened in some kind of a loop. After the third loop I landed then manually.
I used the XR2.
Maybe something we could check later on ? ( I have a 160 MB CSV-file....so much stuff to read ) .
Thanks again,
Ingo
I mean if I understand this correct. You have created a 50 elements array, which stores "50x trigger save-points-relative-to-destination".
Maybe a 50 elements-array is too large ? So...separating ot to 2x25 ?
...Or maybe using "short" instead of "int" for this array to save some memory ?
....But then we need to convert "short" to "int" again before running the DIST*1000....but if doing this one by one....?
I both cases I have started a scenario, where I was dockked at ISS, so the Orbiter's uptime/session-time was nearly the same (about 1 hour).
But how should the XR2 vessel create data-loss in GS2-mfd ?