First Steps: Difference between revisions

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(→‎Quickstart Mode: Simple AGC)
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The Quickstart mode is intended for beginners, who are already familiar with Orbiter in general, but don't have much particular knowledge about Apollo and the historic spacecraft. If you aren't familiar with Orbiter yet, we suggest to try the built-in Deltaglider at first.
The Quickstart mode is intended for beginners, who are already familiar with Orbiter in general, but don't have much particular knowledge about Apollo and the historic spacecraft. If you aren't familiar with Orbiter yet, we suggest to try the built-in Deltaglider at first.


In Quickstart mode as much as possible is done automatically and the spacecraft behave as much as possible like standard Orbiter spacecrafts. It's only very rarely necessary to use the panel. All (or almost all) critical maneuvers are done by autopilot and you can also fly the spacecraft more "Orbiter like" than the real Apollo spacecraft.
In Quickstart mode as much as possible is done automatically and the spacecraft behave as much as possible like standard Orbiter spacecrafts. It's only very rarely necessary to use the panel. All (or almost all) critical maneuvers are done by autopilot and you can also fly the spacecraft more "Orbiter like" than the real Apollo spacecraft. The [[Simple AGC]] is used as [[w:Apollo_Guidance_Computer|Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC)]].


This mode is currently the only mode that can effectively fly a complete moon landing mission.  There is a (in progress) tutorial and checklist page [[Quickstart to the Moon]].
This mode is currently the only mode that can effectively fly a complete moon landing mission.  There is a (in progress) tutorial and checklist page [[Quickstart to the Moon]].

Revision as of 23:20, 27 July 2008

Realism Levels
Quickstart Mode
  • For beginners
  • Orbiter-like control of the spacecraft
  • Almost no panel usage necessary

Virtual AGC Mode

  • For advanced users
  • Realistic behavior of the spacecraft
  • Utilizes Virtual AGC

After you finished the Installation of the latest beta version the Project Apollo scenarios are in the "Project Apollo - NASSP" scenario folder and subfolders. Because of the ongoing development many of the scenarios and missions are not working yet, they are in the "Broken Scenarios" folder.

Project Apollo - NASSP supports different levels of complexity or realism modes, so you can adjust the difficulty level you want to use. You choose the desired mode by choosing the appropriate scenario. At the moment Quickstart Mode is available for beginners, while Virtual AGC Mode is intended for the advanced user.

Quickstart Mode

The Apollo 7 Saturn 1b on pad

The Quickstart mode is intended for beginners, who are already familiar with Orbiter in general, but don't have much particular knowledge about Apollo and the historic spacecraft. If you aren't familiar with Orbiter yet, we suggest to try the built-in Deltaglider at first.

In Quickstart mode as much as possible is done automatically and the spacecraft behave as much as possible like standard Orbiter spacecrafts. It's only very rarely necessary to use the panel. All (or almost all) critical maneuvers are done by autopilot and you can also fly the spacecraft more "Orbiter like" than the real Apollo spacecraft. The Simple AGC is used as Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC).

This mode is currently the only mode that can effectively fly a complete moon landing mission. There is a (in progress) tutorial and checklist page Quickstart to the Moon.

Missions

The following missions and scenarios are available for Quickstart mode:

Virtual AGC Mode

The Apollo 11 Saturn V on pad

The Virtual AGC mode is intended for the advanced users, who already have some basic knowledge about the Apollo missions, are familiar with Orbiter and now want to do it like the real astronauts did.

In Virtual AGC mode everything is as authentic as possible and you have to fly the mission (almost) like the real thing. You have to do long checklists and control the internal systems manually. The spacecrafts behave more like the real ones, the S-IVB is restartable only once for example.

A very important device of the Apollo spacecraft is the Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC), which normally does the guidance, navigation and control tasks. In this mode, the Virtual AGC, an Apollo Guidance Computer emulator running the original, authentic Apollo flight software (at the moment Colossus 1A, build 249 from October 28, 1968, flown with Apollo 9) is used. With the Virtual AGC you can do all procedures exactly as described in the original documentation.

Attention
Because of the AGC hardware emulation time acceleration higher then about 10x is not possible as long as the guidance computer is turned on.

On real Apollo missions, many things went wrong, mostly minor. In Virtual AGC mode, some of these failures are simulated at the appropriate time in the mission. So be sure to perform your control panel checks and work around any failures which do occur.

Missions

The following missions and scenarios are available for Virtual AGC mode:

Unmanned Missions

A few unmanned Apollo missions are supported. The missions run automatically, simply activate time acceleration and wait for the next event. time acceleration will be deactivated a few minutes beforehand.

Fictional Missions

Scenarios in Fictional missions directory:

Documentation

As always, be sure to review documentation relevant to your mission. The Checklists and Missions pages are a good place to begin.