Yajvan Posted June 14, 2015 Share Posted June 14, 2015 As the topic says, the plane's nose is pointed up at 36k feet..... I climbed at 500 ft/sec. Flight is an A380-800(SMS overland).. a little help pls? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
davidjones Posted June 14, 2015 Share Posted June 14, 2015 The first thing you do is get an aircraft with an FMC. Failing in that you have to have the performance tables that will show the aircraft's altitude capability for a give weight and temperature. DJ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
andyjohnston Posted June 14, 2015 Share Posted June 14, 2015 In any real world, plane, it is not always possible to climb right to altitude, because of the weight. As the flight proceeds, and fuel is burned off, the plane can step to higher and higher altitudes. Spent way too much time using these sims... FS 5.1, FS-98, FS-2000, FS-2002, FS-2004, FSX, Flight, FSW, P3Dv3, P3Dv4, MSFS Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kingnorris Posted June 14, 2015 Share Posted June 14, 2015 Which reminds me of FS 2002-----ATC would say "Climb and maintain 36,000 feet" while still on the ground, lol. ATC step climbs were added in FS9 (A nice upgrade in my opinion) CLX - SET Gaming Desktop - Intel Core i9 10850K - 32GB DDR4 3000GHz Memory - GeForce RTX 3060 Ti - 960GB SSD + 4TB HDD - Windows 11 Home Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
darryl737 Posted June 15, 2015 Share Posted June 15, 2015 As stated ideally you will want a FMC, failing that a performance chart will be a good guide although it wont give you nominal performance like the FMC will. AMD 9590 5Ghz, Asus 990X Sabertooth, Asus 285 Strix, 8Gb Ram x2 RipJaws, Corsair Hydro H100, Corsair CM750M, 2TB Short Stroked HDD, Samsung 120Gb SSD for OS, x3 ViewSonic VX2370 LED Frameless Monitors. x1 Semi Understanding Partner. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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