OV-10 Bronco Association Museum Simulator Project
INTRODUCTION
The OV-10 Bronco Association
is a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving the history of the OV-10
Bronco and the Forward Air Controller (FAC) mission. The association is based
at Meacham Field in Fort Worth, Texas, and has established a museum there. The
museum's collection is growing rapidly and includes two recently purchased Broncos.
In 2005 Dave Culp, a former USAF Bronco pilot, put together a PC-based flight
simulation station for the museum, based on FlightGear.
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
The OV-10 simulator hardware consists of a standard PC with an AMD 2300+ CPU,
512 MB RAM, GeForce MX4000 video card, standard peripherals with speakers and
a USB joystick. The monitor was supplied by the museum, which helped keep the
shipping costs down.
The operating system is linux, Mandrake 10.1, with the latest nVidia video driver,
the KDE desktop, and can be used as a workstation if need be.
The simulator software is a slightly modified version of FlightGear 0.9.8, optimized
for use by the general public by simplifying some controls and adding automatic
crash detection and reset. The simulation starts with the user OV-10 on the runway
at Ramstein Airbase, Germany, with engines running. The user experience is enhanced
with the addition of over forty Artificial Intelligence (AI) aircraft which fly in
the vicinity of Ramstein. The types of AI aircraft used in the simulation were
chosen to reflect the usual air traffic in southwest Germany circa 1980.
Below is a photo of some museum visitors flying the OV-10.
OV-10_Simulator.jpg
Below is a screen capture of the user OV-10 over the German terrain.
OV10-screen-001.jpg
Below is a screen capture of the user OV-10 in formation with an AI aircraft.
2ship.jpg
Here is a look at the types of AI aircraft that inhabit the simulation.
traffic.jpg
Future Plans
The obvious next step will be to build a replica OV-10 cockpit with
functioning stick, rudder pedals, and power and condition levers, and
to install a big-screen display!
Acknowledgments
The FlightGear community, who have built a wonderful open source
simulator and have designed dozens of realistic models of aircraft.