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Approach Plates FSX - in-game panel?


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There's a freeware app called pdf kneeboard. Can't remember where I downloaded it - probably flightsim.com.

 

It works in-sim and can open and display any pdf, including multi-page pdfs. You can scroll from page to page, zoom, pan and rotate pages. If you move between pages, the app remembers the "state" of a page when you left it and when you return that page will be displayed at the zoom level, and position it was at when you scrolled off it.

 

Coupled with a freeware pdf creator that let's you "print" any file as a pdf and a freeware pdf combiner (PDF Merge) it's very easy to create multi-page pdf files to use during flight with airport diagrams, flight plans, approach plates, etc.

 

Will try to track this down with more details.

 

John

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I had forgotten that I actually published an article documenting this, called "A Tale of Three Apps" here at MH.

 

The crux of the article was to have all this on a separate, stand-alone device to use as a map/document viewer, but the PDF Kneeboard can be used quite efficiently within FS9 or FSX. It installs and runs as a module so shows up on the FS top-line menu and runs seamlessly within FS - easy to display and hide..

 

John

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There's a freeware app called pdf kneeboard. Can't remember where I downloaded it - probably flightsim.com.

It works in-sim and can open and display any pdf, including multi-page pdfs. You can scroll from page to page, zoom, pan and rotate pages. If you move between pages, the app remembers the "state" of a page when you left it and when you return that page will be displayed at the zoom level, and position it was at when you scrolled off it.

Coupled with a freeware pdf creator that let's you "print" any file as a pdf and a freeware pdf combiner (PDF Merge) it's very easy to create multi-page pdf files to use during flight with airport diagrams, flight plans, approach plates, etc.

Will try to track this down with more details.

John

Perfect exactly what I want - going to try it soon see if its all good!

I looked at the GeoApr app but thought there wud b a free version somewhere :)

Thanks guys!

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you can go here for US approach plates, both in GIF and PDF formats: Click here

and here for UK plates: Click here

...and here for the rest of Europe: Click here N.B. This site is rather difficult to navigate, and you have to register forit, but it is free and the only place for free, up-to-date European approach plates

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you can go here for US approach plates, both in GIF and PDF formats: Click here

and here for UK plates: Click here

...and here for the rest of Europe: Click here N.B. This site is rather difficult to navigate, and you have to register forit, but it is free and the only place for free, up-to-date European approach plates

OMG :thum: Thanks for this!!!!

I have taken a screenshot on one of my quick flights in the screenshots forum - this is with the Arlington Approach plate shown on the kneeboard in-game.

Mission accomplished!!!

THANK YOU EVERYONE!!!!

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you can go here for US approach plates, both in GIF and PDF formats: Click here

and here for UK plates: Click here

...and here for the rest of Europe: Click here N.B. This site is rather difficult to navigate, and you have to register forit, but it is free and the only place for free, up-to-date European approach plates

OMG :thum: Thanks for this!!!!

I have taken a screenshot on one of my quick flights in the screenshots forum - this is with the Arlington Approach plate shown on the kneeboard in-game.

Mission accomplished!!!

THANK YOU EVERYONE!!!!

hint: there's a 'thanks' button on the bottom right of my post above..... :winka:

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WARNING: The US free-access site for approach plates, airport diagrams, sectionals, enroute charts, DPs, STARS, etc. etc. etc. will become restricted effective on April 5, 2012. After that time access will be restricted to business entities that have a contract with the FAA and no access by individuals is permitted. They will no doubt wish to package and sell the data to end users. Our local FS club is engaged in a project to download and caputre all of it before they close the doors.

 

There are over 17,800 terminal procedure files and we've opted to buy those on DVD from the FAA (only about $16, with a sort/select/view application included). The files are pdf and the file names are not even remotely useful for determining which go with which airport. The viewing utility is necessary.

 

The remainder is a much smaller number of files (about 150) but many of them, particularly sectionals (54) and Terminal Area Charts (30) are very large, even in zipped format. We estimate that we will have something over 20 GB of zipped data when we get it all. Each of us will have a 32 GB stick drive with everything on that. Note that this data is for the continental US, Alaska, Hawaii, Pacific Territories and Puerto Rico only. Get it while you still can. Our club has no intention of making this available beyond our own membership unless we are sure we're on solid legal ground. That's not entirely clear at this point, but will be less problematic once the downloaded documents have reached their expiration dates and are no longer "current".

 

John

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Sounds like they've struck some kind of exclusivity deal with Jepp et al.

Can you say CARTEL?

Trouble is, where the FAA leads, others follow. This spells potentially bad news for free data on the web, everywhere. :(

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Well, the good news is, we don't have to worry about whether our charts are current. Once we've got them, we've got them. It's a huge amount of data, however. I've never bothered with trying to save them because I knew I could alway go to the site for them. I'd just download what I needed and dump it whan I was done with it. Now that that is changing, we've at least got a decent window of time to get what we need before they bar the door.

John

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Hi Guys and Gals,

Little problem, I have installed the pdf Kneeboard mentioned above. Created a folder called modules in MSFSX folder and put the dll in it. Added code to FSX DLL.xml and the addon does appears in my menu bar. I can open it, in game and get a small grey box with PDF Kneeboard acroos the top.

Now when I try to open a pdf from the popup, it crashes my sim. The pdf's I am using were placed in a folder in my download section. I run FSX w/SP2 on the Vista OS.

Any help would be appreciated. :)Trying to get this up and running correctly so I can use it for the GARR2012

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From their site...

Compatibility:

PDFKneeboard is packaged in two versions - one for FS9/2004 (pdfkneeboard##.zip) and one for FSX SP2 (pdfkneeboard##X.zip)

You do have the correct version, right? I have not installed this in FSX but it works fine in FS9 under XP and Vista.

John

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Yes I have, John, I downloaded/reinstalled it again just to make sure. Started with a fresh flight and different aircraft just to make sure it wasn't happing from a saved flight. FSX still stops responding. The pdf's open fine on their own and i shouldn't think it matters where I store the files either. Another "Why always my computer?" moment. :huh:

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K, thanks. That was my next step. I was thinking it was just something easy I had missed and that others might have gone through and figured out already.

Edit Author replied and is offering support. I will post results.

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