- Joined
- Feb 6, 2008
- Messages
- 38,965
- Reaction score
- 3,937
- Points
- 203
- Location
- Wolfsburg
- Preferred Pronouns
- Sire
cause i bet you 5 dollars that every one of you on this forum was new to orbiter at one time just like me.
You would have won the bet. Just like I would win the bet that you have been born or water is wet.
But still: It is a sign of poor piloting skills, if you blame Orbiter, the MFDs or an not existing autopilot for your problems, especially after many people explained you in the "talk slowly for the noobs" mode, that you simply act extremely ignorant. You are quick to blame everything for not being like inside your favorite flight sim game, or that orbiters physics are not like you expect them to be. Of course they are not, they are based on real physics, not your personal preferences.
Even more, it wouldn't work differently. For making a spacecraft fly in Orbiter like in your favorite starwars movie, you need to wrap a lot of code around it and waste a lot of energy in Orbiter for fighting all the forces and potentials that would make you fly in a different direction.
Everybody started with poor piloting skills. I am sure even martins started with them. I can't even tell how often I missed by burn targets in the beginning and needed to restart. I needed 5 days until I docked on the ISS. Despite having had all the theory in advance at an university. All the theory is one thing, applying it properly the other. But you don't even care about the theory yet, you are still often defending that things should be like for aircraft.
And nobody even dared complaining about spaceflight being no pony club.
You crash, burn up, get stranded in space. And you simply start again. You will NEVER really stop making errors. It is a simulation game, and you want challenges. And challenges mean risks. The difference between a noob and a pro is eventually just, that the pro has accidents, that the noob can only dream of. In the beginning your most exciting failure might be just crashing into the moon because you failed checking your transfer trajectory. Later you can post for the 20th time how hot a miscalculation in a Saturn aerobraking can get. But for doing that, you need to get there, first.
So. You expect all to be easy. AP always means autopilot, right? And for flying higher in space, you simply raise your nose.
But you NEVER really asked, what is expected from you.
It's not so hard after you get used to it, you know...