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100.NAVAIDS.DAT
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1991-04-26
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2KB
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76 lines
'NAVAIDS.DAT
'===========
'essentials as always
INPUT, see03.sc1
OUTPUT, test.sc1
DIR
'SEE can help you to place navaids into your scenery files. You
'might wonder why since ASD does this as well. Several pos-
'sibilities:
'You may have many of them and they're easier to place via SEE
'just by making a list.
'The source of one might be outside the scenery boundaries and
'would be tedious to place with ASD.
'Or you might want to control the active range instead of accepting
'ASD defaults.
'In any case it is simple -- to set a VOR:
'first we must tell SEE where the source of the transmission
'occurs. We can use any of the position commands to do this
'(see LIBRARY.DAT for a full discussion) but for now we'll
'use the most direct way:
NORTH, 18399.1234
EAST, 18401.5678
'now we tell SEE what frequency we want to tune (while flying)
'in order to receive this particular message:
FREQ, 109.05
'(this must be a valid FS VOR frequency)
'finally; after setting up the essential information (where;
'which frequency;) we ask SEE to add the VOR:
VOR
'now when we fly within an approximate range of 18 nautical miles
'(default value) and dial up 109.05 we will receive this VOR.
'------------------------------------------------------------
'NDB's are handled similarly --
'If the default range is too large we can add a statement to adjust it
'to what we want:
UNITS, NM
RANGE, 10
'we've just told SEE that we want the range to be 10 nm.
'Add the frequency (for an NDB this time):
FREQ, 123
'Locate the source of the transmission
NORTH, 18380
EAST, 18439
'Tell SEE to do it:
NDB
'OK; that's enough for this lesson.
SAVE
END