I adjust to my own system for experimental purposes. As a result I have several copies of the same aircraft with different sizes. I do have some aircraft with their default sizes, but only where they do not interfere with the experiment in hand.
Here is a example of my AI 757's and 747's. All my 757's are at 25m and all my 747's are at 43m so if new 757's and 747's don't have the same radius as the ones I already have I will change it.
kungfuman wrote:Why those values? Is it part of a system? Or is that just the value that the first 747 and 757 models had in your FS9 set-up?
Cheers
Those were the values the old PAI planes had. So I just stuck with those values when I deleted the PAI planes and added the newer AIA (and other AI models) planes.
I also use the same radius with a M-Code method to set up the parking slots. This system is universal, for example, if I have a USAF C-130 (21M slot) land at a German Air Force Base it will park in the MCRM (21M slot) slot. A Royal Air Force Tristar MCRH (44M) lands at a Italian Base, it will go to a MCRH (44M) slot etc...etc.. Makes AFCAD(ing) easier for me and I can look at the AFCAD and see where and how many slots I have to program.
I am also using the same system for all my GA and BIZ traffic using XGA code and radius.
XGA GA Small (10m)
XGA GA Medium (14M)
I DO NOT USE GA LARGE if all possible.... (It would have been nice if this was a Commercial RAMP type for non-gate type aircraft (i.e. BN-2, B-1900, Metro 3, Merlins etc etc).
I also use NAVL and DOCK for my float and ship traffic. I also radius them according to size etc...
All my Commercial (Airlines, Cargo and Charter) and other (non-military goverment) traffic has been coded with appropriate parking codes and types. I NEVER leave a aircraft not coded, even if I have to make up a simple code to use. I also radius all my non-PAI commercial aircraft to PAI radius and parking standards. It does help getting them to the right places....
From what I have observed, and I do a lot of traffic watching, it works very well.
Let's not forget that while the above figures are a precise representation of the people who actually entered the poll, when we interpret them to make generalisations about the wider community, we enter the territory in which statistics can be worse than lies (if we're not very careful).
Only one of the above percentages can be taken as a good indication of user behaviour: The one relating to those who don't change model radii. If we were to look at the relative strengths between the other user categories based on this poll so far, we would be on very shaky ground.