OV-10 Bronco Museum: Difference between revisions
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The '''OV-10 Bronco Museum''' is | The '''OV-10 Bronco Museum''' is an [[aircraft]] museum run by the OV-10 Bronco Association in the USA. It is home to a variety of [[North American OV-10A Bronco|OV-10 Bronco]] historical items.[http://www.ov-10bronco.net/] | ||
The museum is responsible for the '''OV-10 Bronco Association Museum Simulator Project'''[http://www.flightgear.org/Projects/obam/] | The museum is responsible for the '''OV-10 Bronco Association Museum Simulator Project'''[http://www.flightgear.org/Projects/obam/] | ||
The OV-10 simulator hardware at the museum runs a modified version of [[FlightGear 0.9.8]] on Mandrake 10.1 w/ KDE desktop running on a PC with AMD 2300+ CPU, 512 MB RAM, and GeForce MX4000. The setup simulates a OV-10 at Ramstein Airbase, Germany around 1980.[http://www.flightgear.org/Projects/obam/] | The OV-10 simulator hardware at the museum runs a modified version of [[FlightGear 0.9.8]] on Mandrake 10.1 w/ KDE desktop running on a PC with AMD 2300+ CPU, 512 MB RAM, and GeForce MX4000. Interace includes CRT monitor, keyboard, and a USB joystick. The setup simulates a OV-10 at Ramstein Airbase, Germany around 1980.[http://www.flightgear.org/Projects/obam/] | ||
Developments of the simulation installation include:[http://www.flightgear.org/Projects/obam/] | Developments of the simulation installation include:[http://www.flightgear.org/Projects/obam/] |
Revision as of 17:21, 1 October 2008
The OV-10 Bronco Museum is an aircraft museum run by the OV-10 Bronco Association in the USA. It is home to a variety of OV-10 Bronco historical items.[1]
The museum is responsible for the OV-10 Bronco Association Museum Simulator Project[2]
The OV-10 simulator hardware at the museum runs a modified version of FlightGear 0.9.8 on Mandrake 10.1 w/ KDE desktop running on a PC with AMD 2300+ CPU, 512 MB RAM, and GeForce MX4000. Interace includes CRT monitor, keyboard, and a USB joystick. The setup simulates a OV-10 at Ramstein Airbase, Germany around 1980.[3]
Developments of the simulation installation include:[4]
- over 40 AI aircraft
- simplifyed controls
- automatic crash detection and reset
The simulation installation was developed and setup by David Culp in 2005,[5] who has also worked on other developments for FlightGear.
The museum itself is located in on scenery tile w100n30.tgz (download here)
Links
- http://www.flightgear.org/Projects/obam/
- http://www.ov-10bronco.net/OBA/
- http://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?id=30