Catching a Cat – but not by its tail!

The Shana Carpool PBY6A: graceful and fun
The Shana Carpool PBY-6A: graceful and fun

As regular readers here will know, I’ve been bitten by the SL flying bug. It’s not something I do all the time, but it is something I enjoy; so much so that I’ve gained a (very) modest collection of aircraft over the past couple of years, of which I tend to use my EC-135 helicopter, Spitfire and Terra Stingray the most.

However, these three now have a competitor for my time and attention: a Consolidated PBY Catalina, which is affectionately referred to as the “Cat” by aviation enthusiasts. It’s one of those aircraft I fell in love with while going around airshows; being a flying boat, there is something very graceful about its lines that not even the frog-like “blister” canopies on the sides or the gawky, sticky-outy main wheels (on the amphibious version) can spoil.

Starting-up the engines at Second Norway airport, ready for an early morning flight home
Starting-up the engines at Second Norway airport, ready for an early morning flight home

So when I was out investigating air racing locations in SL (of which, more anon) and I came across Shana Carpool’s PBY-6A (the “A” being for “amphibious”), I got completely sidetracked (sorry Terag!), and couldn’t help but click the button labelled “PAY”. And I’m glad I did; this aircraft is simply beautiful.

This is actually a new addition to the Shana’s impressive range of aeroplanes, and two variants are provided in the package: the flyable version, which weighs-in at a LI of 49 and a physics weight of around 9; and a static “display” model, which has a LI of 38 and roughly the same physics weight. The scaling of the aircraft is idea for SL flying, and the dual controls make it fun to fly with a friend.

One of the great things about flying in SL is the chance to discover things - such as these glorious paddle steamers!
One of the great things about flying in SL is the chance to discover things – such as these glorious paddle steamers!

Being the amphibious version, the PBY-6A rezzes with wheels down, ready for a land-based take off. However, simply sit it in Linden water, get in, and with two quick commands you can lower the wing-tip floats raise the wheels, and be ready to take off from the sea. The controls are pretty typical, the usual WASD or arrow keys for up/down and left/right and PAGE UP and PAGE DOWN for the throttle. Other commands are single-letter commands – “g” for raising / lowering the wheels, “v” for lowering / raising the wing-tip floats, etc. In addition to this, the side “blister” canopies can be opened / closed at a click, as can the rear gangway.

Starting the Cat causes the two engines to turn over in sequence; the big radials giving a puff of smoke as they cough into life. Both on land and water, the plane is very responsive to control movements, with ailerons, flaps and rudder responding nicely in response to input.

Passing a favourite landmark: the Fastnet Rock lighthouse on Blake Sea
Passing a favourite landmark: the Fastnet Rock lighthouse on Blake Sea

With land based take-offs, the plane pretty much takes care of itself; simply get up to airspeed and it’ll lift itself off of the runway very smoothly, so with just a touch on the controls, you’re climbing out nicely, ready to bring the wheels up. On water it is slightly different – as it should be. Take-off requires a good head of speed and a firm (not too heavy!) pulling back on the yoke in order to get the water to agree to let you go.

Landings are slightly harder. I’m not a qualified pilot in the physical world, nor am I an expert in dynamics; but I assume that huge overhead wing is responsible; once in the air, it doesn’t want to come back down to Earth, and I found myself drifting quite a distance down the runway before actually getting the wheels on the ground during my initial attempts. Whether the real Catalina is like this, I’ve no idea; but it felt very real, and certainly adds to the experience of flying the plane.

This wasn't planned; but while over Blake Sea I happened across this vintage aircraft carrier
This wasn’t planned; but while over Blake Sea I happened across this vintage aircraft carrier, and a quick snap was too good to pass up

As well as the exterior detail, the PBY6A has a nicely detailed cockpit, complete with the distinctive overhead throttles. The aircraft also comes with a painting kit, with three supplied finishes: white, dirty white and US Navy. UV maps and instructions are supplied for those wishing to create their own livery for the Cat, although I’m hoping we might see an extension pack (as my graphics design skills are non-existent!). I’d happily buy a pack offering RAF Coastal Command colours :). Given you can also deploy a “rescue boat” to help those in distress in the water, perhaps some form of coastguard colours in a pack wouldn’t go amiss (although I assume the boat is for combat pilots who have crashed into the sea).

Region crossings with the PBY6A were no different from when flying my Spitfire or EC-135; the expected “”rubber banding” and / or barrel rolling as a result of the hand-off between regions was the same, and the occasional skewing of the camera to one side of the aircraft was encountered. Neither a fault of the design, just a fact of life with SL region crossings.  However, given it can carry up to nine (2 crew + 7 passengers) I do wonder how things will fair on multiple region crossings under a full load.

The camera slewing issue, when it occurs has led me to start flying more in Mouselook; it’s either that or edited the ‘plane mid-flight and quickly standing/sitting again to reset. I have to say that for some reason, I found doing so a lot more fun in the Catalina than in the Spitfire or EC-135. Perhaps this is simply because flying the Cat is new to me; but I certainly enjoyed myself attempting landings in ML a lot more!

There are some lovely touches to this aeroplane; just witness the way the main wheels tuck themselves up into the fuselage recesses on being raised; similarly the lowering and raising of the wingtip floats is somehow poised and graceful. All told a fabulous aircraft, and one which really is a must for any SL aviation fan, and which also now has me thinking maybe I should be moving to somewhere larger, where I can park it on display :).

Shana Carpool PBY6A Catalina price at the time of writing: L$2,100. Available from Shana Carpool headquarters and vendors across SL.

Yet more remodelling

The updated house and new terrace
The updated house and new terrace (click any picture for full-size)

Seeing Liara’s materials-enabled build of Le Botanique made me realise that, push comes to shove, I’ve not been entirely satisfied with the current layout of my little corner of Second Life I call home since the last time I messed around with it. In particular, I’ve had a feeling for quite a while that the garden lacks something.

While I didn’t want to try to emulate Liara’s work – I’m under no illusions that my creative skills could ever extend that far – there is no denying that the layout of Le Botanique went a fair way in inspiring me to re-vamp my parcel (well, as much as the need to keep with the overall theme of the estate would allow!).

The house from the jetty terrace
The house from the jetty terrace

The first thing I wanted to do was re-arrange the house so that it made better use of the land. While I’ve always liked the stepped design of the place, the fact is that on so small a parcel it leaves a reasonable chunk of land going to waste behind the lounge area, and which is really only good for plonking down a tree, as anything else would be all but obscured. Fortunately, due to the modular approach I’d taken to designing the house, updating it only required a couple of minutes. All I had to do was slide the lounge back behind the bedroom, remove a pillar and two wooden sections, and then lengthen a wall. Simples.

Next came a shameless bout of “borrowing” from Liara in the form of sitting the house on its own little “island” bounded on two sides by water and the other two by the wall along the parcel boundaries.

The new terrace
The new terrace

This allowed for the splitting of the huge terrace which lay to the front of the house (and which saw little use anyway), so I can have a smaller, more functional terrace acting as a jetty for boats, linked to the house by a wooden bridge. On the west side of the house, in another shameless bout of borrowing from Liara, three stepping-stones offer the means to cross the water and reach the revamped garden.

These stepping-stones lead directly to my Piano Terrace which, oddly enough given the name, is the new home for my faithful piano. This sits under a wood lattice supported by four stout beams hung with lanterns, sharing the space with a patio seat, a set of wrought iron chairs and a table offering a place to play backgammon (a game I very much enjoy in the physical world, alongside carrom, which I started playing as a result of our many visits to Sri Lanka), and a large mesh fireplace (my apologies to Cory Edo for tearing apart a copy of her lovely mesh Rustic Pavilion in order to create this!).

Beyond the walls surrounding the terrace is the rest of the garden, a mix of flowerbeds, wild flowers, shrubs and ferns, through which a couple of grassy paths wind. One of these links the terrace to the wooden helipad (no home should ever be without a helipad and helicopter!), and the other linking the helipad to the jetty. Lilies and cattails help finish things up, floating on the water around the house and hugging it edge.

Anoter view of the terrace
Another view of the terrace

I’m not going to pretend the finished result comes anywhere near Le Botanique in terms of beauty or appearance; that really isn’t my intent. But as something which has more of a natural look as feel to it, and which (to me at least) looks a far more inviting environment in which my little collection of Morgan Garret’s marvellous birds seem more at home, I’m pretty happy with the “finished” look. Because helicopter blades and trees tend not to get on together very well, I perhaps haven’t added quite as many trees as might otherwise have been the case, but I’ve included enough to provide some shade over and around the house and close to the piano terrace.

The land capacity for the parcel is 800, of which I’ve used 635 – 159 of which belong to the boat and helicopter. Take these out along with the helipad (5 LI), and there’s obviously a lot more scope for flora to be added should I want to go further (no spinning rotors to worry about for a start!). As it is, mesh and the use of convex hull helped keep down the overall LI, and as two of the great pleasures of living on Blake Sea is the amount of space it offers for boating and flying, I’d rather have the boat and helicopter in-world than garaged in inventory awaiting use; so I’m reasonably happy with things as they are for now.

Which is not to say I won’t still be fiddling with things this time next week!

A foggy morning ...
A foggy morning …

Me and Flat Ebbe

Strawberry Singh’s Monday Memes are fun – not that I participate in all of them, but I do read them. A while back, she did a Flat Rodvik meme, which I actually missed out on, so when she decided to do a Flat Ebbe meme, I knew I had to give it a go.

The rules are simple, as Berry states:

Meme instructions: Pick up a copy of Flat Ebbe Linden from my marketplace store for free and take him to one of your favorite places on the grid. Also, share at least three things that you’d like to tell Ebbe. Please remember to leave a link to your post in the comments and share your Flat Ebbe picture in the Blog memes flickr group.

A week or so ago, I invited the real Ebbe to come see the sights of Blake Sea. While he did indeed do so, he passed on my offer to chaperone him to places of interest (I must not be popular, it was the second invite he’d turned down from me 😦 , even if he did come and sit with me for a while at the overspill auditorium ahead of Philip Rosedale’s VWBPE keynote before he managed to slip into the main presentation regions). So, deciding to make the most of the next best thing, I decided to take Flat Ebbe on a cruise around the Blake Sea estates.

Things started out well enough; he even brought some champers along and we had a quick slurp before setting out. Then, ever the gentleman, he offer to drive the boat.

A little pre-cruise champers. such a gentleman!
A little pre-cruise champers. such a gentleman! (click for full size)

Along the way, I thought about what I’d like to suggest to Ebbe, particularly as I’d already taken the liberty of saying a few words on the day he officially started at the Lab.  However, there are some things I’d probably say, had I the opportunity:

  • Don’t just consider the ToS issue to be about problems of ownership. The concerns are as much about the lack of limitations – duration, scope, purpose, all of which should be addressed if equilibrium is to be restored.
  • Encourage your marketing team to think of ways to engage with SL communities to help promote the platform. Leverage some of the incredible experiences people create here. Get marketing to think beyond just following IMVU’s banner ads, and to consider more engaging ways to broaden SL’s appeal.
  • Don’t fall back into just looking at the technical issues when it comes to getting new users engaged in SL. You may not be keen on talking to psychologists about matters, but do consider making use of an ethnographer It’s a diverse world we have here, and techniques used in the real world can have value here as well.
  • Keep those doors of communication open! It’s been great to see more informative communications through the blogs (not to mention your time in the forums and on Twitter).
  • Keep having fun 🙂 . And if you want to find out more on e-sports, always happy to take you skydiving or boat racing ;-). Or as you like skiing, why not take a look at the facilities Bay City and the East River Federation are bringing together for the SL Winter Games at the end of the year?

I could go on, but I always dread sounding like a cliché about grandmothers and eggs in matters like this. As it is, these are the things uppermost in my mind right now, so I’ll leave it there 🙂 .

Now, I just *know* this wouldn't have happened if the real Ebbe Linden had been driving...
Now, I just *know* this wouldn’t have happened if the real Ebbe Linden had been driving… (click for full size)

Of memes and SL helpful tools

It’s Monday, so Strawberry Singh has launched another in her series of new Monday Memes. This one is on how we make our SL experience better via the tools (viewer buttons, HUDs, etc.), we use, or as she explains it:

Share a screenshot of your viewer setup and/or a list of tools/HUDS you guys use to make your Second Life experiences better.

I’m actually totally boring when it comes to HUDs and the like, so I’m actually going to take things a little further to cover a few little things I use outside of SL which help me enjoy my SL time.

First off, my viewer-set up.  My primary viewer of choice is Firestorm. I’ve been with it since the very first iteration, and I’ve been fortunate in that by-and-large it has performed well for me across two main PCs, and also works reasonably well on my Intel ATOM / nVidia ION powered notebook.

My Firestorm UI
My Firestorm UI with the Phototools Edit Sky Presets floater open

My viewer window is pretty boring, as you can see. No HUDs are permanently attached as I utilise capabilities in the viewer for everything I routinely need. The only HUDs which get attached tend to be related to boating, flying or weapons.

For me, my Second Life experience is made somewhat easier by the tools I use outside of the viewer, These come by way of Lance Corrimal of Dolphin Viewer fame.

The SL-related search options as they appear when added to Firefox
The SL-related search options as they appear when added to Firefox

In May 2013, I picked-up on a pointer from Daniel Voyager and blogged about some Chrome browser extensions which can be used with SL. As a result, Lance tapped me about a set of Firefox Helpers he had created for Second Life. I gave them a try – and have been using them ever since.

The helpers are all search-related, and add options to the Firefox search bar which allow you to access:

  • Second Life Search
  • Marketplace Search
  • Marketplace Merchant Search
  • SL Wiki search
  • the JIRA search (search results subject to viewing permissions on the JIRA).

All of them are quick and easy to install, and all of them work reasonably well (or as well as the Second Life and Marketplace searches can sometimes be expected to work…).

The obvious beauty of these options is that I don’t need to faff around opening my SL dashboard to search the SL website or load the Marketplace and then search for something; it’s purely a case of tabbing over to my browser and selecting the helper I need.

Locate a Second Life Merchant directly from the firefox search bar ...
Locate a Second Life Merchant directly from the Firefox search bar …

Installing the helpers is a breeze. Lance has kindly hosted them in a ZIP file on his Dolphin viewer website, so it’s purely a matter of:

  • Downloading them
  • Dropping them into the Firefox browser Searchplugins folder (for Windows, this is located in either C:\Program Files\Mozilla Firefox\browser\Searchplugins (32-bit) or C:\Program Files (x86)\Mozilla Firefox\browser\Searchplugins (64-bit)
  • Restarting Firefox to enable them.
... Or check on a JIRA (subject to JIRA viewing permissions), and more, using the Firefox Search Helpers
… Or check on a JIRA (subject to JIRA viewing permissions), and more, using the Firefox Search Helpers

If you spend a lot of time searching the SL Marketplace or website for products or information, having these helpers installed might high shave a little time off of initially launching and searching one of the websites. Kodus to Lance for providing them.

Whirling around the skies of Second Life

Spijkers Aviation & Marine EC-135 over Blake Sea Half Hitch
Spijkers Aviation & Marine EC-135 over Blake Sea Half Hitch

While visiting RiTai recently, I took time out to fly a helicopter modelled on the Eurocopter EC-135. I’ve never really fussed that much with helicopters in SL (one has been sitting in my inventory forever but it is so old, a Havoc update way beck in … 2009? 2010? broke it and as I’d already stopped using it, I never really bothered with the updated version). As such, I was a little curious to see if my attitude had changed.

Well, flying the machine, even on the one region, proved to be a lot of fun; so much so that I got, well, hooked. Since then, and as time has allowed, I’ve been shuffling around SL looking at various makes and models of helicopter with a view to getting one, and repeatedly found myself drawn back to the EC-135 design as being particularly attractive. My poking around led me to Spijkers Aviation & Marine where, after much mmming and ahhing (and not a few flights in  the demo aircraft there) I picked up Tig’s civilian version of the EC-135.

Spijkers Aviation & Marine EC-135 - passing the Fastnet light
Spijkers Aviation & Marine EC-135 – passing the Fastnet light

I’ve barely put it down since.

Weighing-in with a land impact of 27, the helicopter is well made and looks good. Seating the pilot and up to five passengers, it offers plenty of opportunities for flying with friends – but that’s just the icing on the cake.

For a start, the pack itself contains not one, but three variants of the helicopter: flyable, static (unscripted), and “desktop” (which is small and beautifully formed), each of which is offered in three basic colours: red, white and blue. As the full-size versions are MOD, also included in the pack are additional texture sets allowing the purchaser to mix and match the three finishes to produce a very individual aircraft – and if that is not enough, Tigs and Amy offer to produce  custom textures upon enquiry.

As well as the various models of the helicopter and the texture options, the pack includes two sets of instructions and two HUDS – “full” or “light” depending on your preference. Neither is absolutely required for flying, and each has a number of buttons not applicable to the civilian version of the EC-135.

The texture packs made customising one of the default versions a breeze. As I have a thing for red and white (witness Lady of Calas and Lady of Calas 2),  I wanted my new toy to be ranged in the same colours, and it took me less than 3 minutes to have a two-tone EC-135 ready to fly. And flying this little helicopter is fun.

Spijkers Aviation & Marine EC-135 - original red (r) and my 3-minute "custom" finish (l)
Spijkers Aviation & Marine EC-135 – original red (r) and my 3-minute “custom” finish (l)

Page Up and Page Down act as the collective, the arrow keys function as the cyclic for forward / reverse and turning / banking. Other commands are accessed via typing (“s” to start / stop the engine, “l” for lights, “ld” for opening / closing the left door, etc.), or via the HUDs, if used, if used. Handling-wise, the EC-135 is very responsive, and once one has got the hang of using the controls, staying airborne and enjoying oneself is a breeze.

One of the reasons I opted for this model compared to others are the range of additional options. FlySafe, for example turns the aircraft and passengers phantom – handy if you’re flying over mainland only to find someone has parked their skyhome on your flight path and evasive flying might not be that easy due to other buildings, etc., also hanging in the sky.

More importantly (from my viewpoint, at least) is the fact that – like many of Tig’s aircraft – the EC-135 can be configured so that a co-pilot can take the controls (a copy of either HUD can even be given to them). Having been a passenger on flights myself more than a few times, I know how boring sitting and letting someone else pilot you around can get be. so being able to turn over control to a friend and let them experience flying the helicopter for a while, strikes me as a neat idea and helps share the flying experience.

Spijkers Aviation & Marine EC-135 - the controls are ideal for my avatar's height
Spijkers Aviation & Marine EC-135 – the controls are ideal for my avatar’s height

I also like the optional floats that come with this model. While these can only be activated / deactivated when the engine is off, they’re a handy addition for someone like me, who lives on the edge of Blake Sea and is surrounded by water 🙂 .

There a lot more I could say about this helicopter, but I’m not going to – just take it from me, if you’re looking for a helo for yourself and you’ve not tried Spijkers Aviation & Marine, then I thoroughly recommend you hop over to their in-world headquarters and give their demonstrators a go. I doubt you’ll be at all disappointed.

Spijkers Aviation & Marine EC-135 - making an inspection pass near the Second Norway airport tower
Spijkers Aviation & Marine EC-135 – making an inspection pass near the Second Norway airport tower

Related Links

Skipping across the waves on a Silverstone

The E-Tech Silverstone in the red finish - my "Lady of Calas 2"
The E-Tech Silverstone in the red finish – my “Lady of Calas 2”, passing the Fastnet Rock light on Blake Sea

My conversion to SL sailing / boating enthusiast is well-documented, at least within these pages. Admittedly, I have yet to get myself sorted with a sailboat other than my premium gift Exotix, but that’s largely because I’ve yet to find something I really like.

Instead, I’ve been motoring about Blake Sea and elsewhere aboard my E-Tech Sparrow 4, which I re-named Lady of Calas. At the time I purchased the boat, it was on a special offer at L$399. The reason for the offer was that Envy Melody, E-Tech’s founder and creator, has just overhauled the build and improved upon the original. Even so, the price represented remarkable value – and I have to thank Spikey (again) for pointing it out to me.

E-Tech Silverstone Cabin
E-Tech Silverstone Cabin

Now Envy has another boat on promotional offer – at 70% off the list price (L$650). The model in question is the Silverstone, a name which is sure to get my attention, given I am a Formula 1 fan 🙂 . Like the Sparrow, this has been extensively overhauled and is now at version 4.0 which sees the total LI for the vessel substantially reduced from 256 to 132. This actually undercuts the Sparrow by some 25 LI; not bad for a vessel which is roughly twice the length of the Sparrow.

Like the Sparrow, the Silverstone comes in a choice of hull colours (although 5 are on offer here), these being charcoal, royal blue, red, white and pink. As I opted for red for Lady of Calas, I decided to stick with the same for the Silverstone, which I’ve also re-christened Lady of Calas 2, given it is unlikely I’ll have both rezzed at the same time.

Unlike the Sparrow, the Silverstone has a fully enclosed cabin / cockpit which offers plenty of room for seating  up to eight passengers. The aft deck offers additional seating and a trio of sun loungers located above the fantail. Forward of the main cabin is a further sun lounger atop what appears to be a forward cabin, but which is in fact unused space.

Heading back past Fastnet on the way home
Heading back past Fastnet on the way home

As the driver, I’d have liked somewhere to sit down when piloting the boat, but like the Sparrow, the owner has to stand and steer. A minor niggle, admittedly, but my little feet tire easily…

In terms of handling, I have to say I found the Silverstone a bit of a handful at times. While not overly large compared to some other boats, it is sufficiently long enough and the default  camera position located far enough back that it is not given to making fine adjustments to turns, which is particularly noticeable when trying to dock. There’s also no HUD with this model, which might make it a little hard to judge comparative speeds when working up through the gears and running with the throttle open. Fortunately, if you have an E-Tech HUD, it should work with Silverstone as well as any other vessel.

Once at sea, the boat handled well. As with the Sparrow, region crossings were handled reasonably well given the vagaries involved, and in an outing which took me from east the west and back across Blake Sea, I encountered few issues, although these could be as much down to tweaks to the server code as much as anything intrinsic to the boat’s scripting.

Extras with the Silverstone are not as extensive as with the Sparrow, and from my perspective this is fine, as I never actually rezzed any of the Sparrow’s extras beyond demonstrating them. There is, however, some very nice interior lighting effects which let the Silverstone look very attractive and cosy at night.

If there is one thing  with the new boat that is going to take a bit of getting used to, it is its size; the revised terrace / quay at home was more than adequate for the Sparrow, but it is completely overwhelmed by the Silverstone! Nevertheless, Lady of Calas 2 is going to remain rezzed yet a while. Big she may well be, comparatively speaking, but I’m already growing accustomed to her lines 🙂 .

Sizing things up. My E-tach Sparrow (left) with me on the prow; and the E-Tech Silverstone
Sizing things up. My E-tech Sparrow (left) with me on the prow; and the E-Tech Silverstone

Related Links