Jump to content

budreiser

Registered Users
  • Posts

    220
  • Joined

  • Days Won

    4

Posts posted by budreiser

  1. Started around 1985, give or take a year.Think it was called Sub-Logic or something like that. I remember heading south from KORD to look at any scenery. Only thing visible was green until I reached the Gulf of Mexico, then blue..

     

    In one of the later versions I spent oodles of time trying to improve KMSY, my home town field where I briefly worked for the National Weather Service. Created buildings, improved ramps, added fuel storage tanks, etc. Even closed most of it in with page-wire fence. What a waste of time. I think all it did was give me crummier frame rates. Should have used that time reading some Tolstoy novels.

  2. Hope you don't mind two favorites, and they would be KNEW (New Orleans Lakefront) and KMSY (Louis Armstrong Intl), my hometown duo.

     

    I remember as a pre-teen boy hitchhiking to KNEW just to be around aircraft. WWII had recently ended and a myriad of aircraft were spotted around the field. To name a few: PBY's, P-38's, P-51's, A-26's, C-46's and 47,s along with a variety of primary, basic and advanced trainers. Two of the P-38's were dolled up in racing livery. The P-51's were LAANG property.

     

    Most of the adults who worked in the hangers enjoyed having my friend and I around but you also had the occasional grouch. I have a dozen or so of old photos I took of some of those aircraft around here somewhere. If I can locate will post some in this thread.

     

    Airline operations prior to your DC-4 was out of KNEW, but with 4 engine service longer runways were needed. I was at the inauguration of KMSY in 1946 and just about every WWII aircraft was on display...the crown jewel, the B-29. If my memory is correct, the guest speaker was Jimmy Doolittle. From 1959 until 1972 My wife, boys and I lived a mile or so north of the N-S runway. When those old Lockheed Constellations passed over, it shook the dishes in the cabinets. AH, the memories.

  3. Ever since I was a kid (born in 1935) I loved airplanes. A childhood accident at age 6 put out my left eye so that pretty much sealed my dreams of flying. Now that you can get a license with vision in one eye, I can no longer afford it, not that it was ever really affordable to me. But thanks to many along my path in life who let me take control of the stick, I got a lot of real in flight jollies. In the early 80's, when the first flight sim came on the scene, I felt like a kid in a candy store. I have enjoyed this game (or whatever you wish to call it) ever since. My big dissapointment was seeing Microsoft (so to speak) throw the Flight Sim program under the bus. I looked forward to getting a new version every 2 or 3 years and they always made improvements. Being a navigation freak, I love flying the big iron on long hauls, but, like a RW airline pilot, that gets old on a daily basis. I am actually good friends with an ex US Airways Captain (Female) who still loves flying but says how boring it was flying from KPIT to KCLT over and over and over and over. Now that she is retired she'd love to do it again. But I digress. When I get tired of flying a 727 from KJFK to KMSY, I take a Mooney or some other small prop job and fly VFR along the coast from KTPA to KPNS or KPDX to KSFO. Coastal routes are always interesting. If stuff like this bores you, you can always go out and cut the grass (or shovel snow if it's the season).
    • Like 1
×
×
  • Create New...