![]() ![]() ![]() There was some comment about possibly breaching Lee Swordy's copyright, perhaps because the GUI looks much like his. I had to close down in the middle of my previous message to take my wife for an appointment, so here's the rest of it. Please can you tell me which is the second freeware alternative? So, highlighting a parking spot gives you all the information about it, and everything is editable from the window. For example, it has a separate window for editing objects. It has a different interface, which in some ways is better than AFX's. BGL files directly, which will then make it a genuine freeware alternative to Flight 1's AFX. It will doubtless soon be able to import. It needs an easier installation.īy the way, it includes a menu item to compile. At present, FSX Planner is fine for techos. It also needs the FSX SDK, which is only available in the FSX de luxe edition. You have to find and download Java 1.5 or later (no hyperlink is given for this, and I had some difficulty finding it). ![]() FSX Planner doesn't have a Help file yet.įSX Planner is excellent, but is still in Beta form. I haven't read AFX's help file properly yet so can't compare them). AFCAD2's Help file is a model of clarity. When installed, it works for both FS2004 & and all versions of FSX, so AFCAD2 is not needed (with one reservation. The point is that Flight 1's AFX is a finished product. For both FS2004 and FSX it will load and save airport files directly. With AFX for FS2004, you can add taxiway signs and exclusion rectangles (very useful). It's not very expensive either (especially if you can buy it with £ Stirling ). And I think you're being a bit hard on simmers, calling them 'indiscriminate' for buying Flight 1's sophisticated ready-to-use product. OK, freeware alternatives do exist, but they're a fat lot of use if no-one knows about them. ![]()
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