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X-Plane 11 Scenery--CYJN Saint-Jean Airport 1.0

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X-Plane 11 Scenery--CYJN Saint-Jean Airport 1.0. Saint-Jean Airport, is located in the southwestern section of the city of Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec, Canada. For a GA airport, CYJN is rather large and contains several structures and facilities. CYJN is at an elevation of 136 ft / 41 m and boasts of three asphalt runways: 02/20 at 2,438 feet (743 m); 06/24 at 2,349 feet (716 m) and 11/29 at 4,012 feet (1,223 m). If you are in the mood for visiting a vibrant, colorful and cosmopolitan city, Montreal (CYUL) is a few Beechcraft minutes away directly West. Other sceneries in this Quebec series, CYFJ canada_qc_cyfj.zip and CYRQ canada_qc_cyrq.zip are under 160 km to the NW and N respectively. This is a lego-brick scenery and uses the megabytes of art assets already included in your installation of X-Plane. It will compare favourably, at times better, to other (much larger sized) sceneries of this area and will probably exceed your expectations. Please see the included documentation for further details. By Charles Macelli.

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This is part of CFB St. Jean. It is the Canadian Forces recruit training base. All recruits joining the RCAF, RCN and, Canadian Army go here for their basic training. After completing basic, they are sent off to other bases for their trades training after which they are posted to their bases, ships or units. This is the reason for the sport facilities. The larges building houses the recruits. I did my basic training here in the 1960's when the old WWII barracks were still in use. The hanger line is where we did our indoor drill and parade training.
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This is part of CFB St. Jean. It is the Canadian Forces recruit training base. All recruits joining the RCAF, RCN and, Canadian Army go here for their basic training. After completing basic, they are sent off to other bases for their trades training after which they are posted to their bases, ships or units. This is the reason for the sport facilities. The largest building houses the recruits. I did my basic training here in the 1960's when the old WWII barracks were still in use. The hanger line is where we did our indoor drill and parade training. My grandson did his basic training there this spring. Certainly has changed a lot from my time. Thanks for memories and the scenery.
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My grandson did his basic training there this spring. Certainly has changed a lot from my time. Thanks for memories and the scenery.

 

Thanks for your reflections. This is what makes this hobby worthwhile.

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