Kerbal Space Program er et (indtil videre) gratis spil/legetøj hvor man bygger en rumraket og så flyver den.
Her er lidt video:
Houston we have a problem!
Fan trailer
How To Get To The Mun
Download her: Kerbal Space Program
Her er min seneste raket:
Der er en munelander gemt inde i keglen fra det tykke stykke til toppen. Jeg kan komme i kredsløb om Munen med det, men det bliver stadig bare til nogen små kratre deri...
Og her er landingsmodulet på vej ned:
Og her går det galt:
En lidt opdateret version af min raket, sat i kredsløb: Video
Kerbal Space Program: Vil du med en tur til Munen?
- nielsm
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Re: Kerbal Space Program: Vil du med en tur til Munen?
YES YES YES YES YES!
De kommer aldrig hjem igen men det er heller ikke så vigtigt, vel?
*danser*
De kommer aldrig hjem igen men det er heller ikke så vigtigt, vel?
*danser*
Re: Kerbal Space Program: Vil du med en tur til Munen?
haha...kommer så meget til at prøve dette når jeg kommer hjem i dag
- nielsm
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Re: Kerbal Space Program: Vil du med en tur til Munen?
Nu har jeg også bygget en nyrårsraket http://youtu.be/Nxb-tWhSDXs
Re: Kerbal Space Program: Vil du med en tur til Munen?
SPAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAACCEEEEE
- nielsm
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Re: Kerbal Space Program: Vil du med en tur til Munen?
Det lykkedes mig tidligere at lande på Munen og komme sikkert hjem igen Jeg livestreamede forsøget, men fik ikke optaget det eller taget screenshots. (Men kaas var vidne til det!)
Så er spørgsmålet bare, om jeg kan gøre det igen =)
Så er spørgsmålet bare, om jeg kan gøre det igen =)
- nielsm
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Re: Kerbal Space Program: Vil du med en tur til Munen?
Der er kommet en ny eksperimentel version, 0.13x1, op: http://kerbalspaceprogram.com/forum/index.php?topic=4842.0
Angiveligt skulle version 0.13 blive den sidste gratis version.
Angiveligt skulle version 0.13 blive den sidste gratis version.
- nielsm
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Re: Kerbal Space Program: Vil du med en tur til Munen?
Jeg keder mig lidt så her kommer en repost af en historie jeg skrev andetsteds på internetterne! Undskyld for engelsk, jeg gider ikke oversætte
Kerbal Space Program mission code KOL-Dr/1, personal log, Bill Kerman
They had built a somewhat unusual rocket. It was not the usual fully symmetric designs we had seen in all the simulations. They promised it would bring us "closer to God" than any Kerbonaut before.
(.craft file, requires Challenger and Sunday Punch packs)
At least it was stable, the entire ascent out of Kerbin's atmosphere was smooth. We had been instructed to jettison the huge rockets on the side when they stopped firing, and engage the smaller rockets on the other axis. That was supposed to get us to outer space!
After that, just keep the main rocket engine firing until we passed 2.7 km/s, then turn it off and wait.
It would then be many weeks before the next maneuver. The control pod computer (didn't they call it "JCN"? -Bob) would wake us up, and then we were supposed to align the rocket with the direction of travel and fire the engines again.
After reaching a speed above 12 km/s, we turned the engines off again and went back to the cryobeds.
I think something went wrong at that point, because when we woke up again, more than a year had passed, according to the computer. I'm sure the mission plan had said it would only be half a year! I think I noticed Jeb's face looking somewhat different, not the usual huge grin all over... I'll make a drawing...
But we were at that time more than thirty-two million kilometers from our dear star Kerbol, nearly three standard astronomical units.
Then came the part of the mission plan I do remember clearly, it was something training had covered many times before: Counter-thrust to zero velocity.
Jeb insisted he would be the one to do this maneuver, and had already jumped to the instruments and bumped the throttle to maximum while letting out a huge wail, "Yeeee-haw!" He even jettisoned the long fuel tank and engine partway through, as if it was second nature.
It had seemed like a good idea at the time.
Bob just went straight back to sleep, but I was somewhat put off by the way Jeb kept staring at the instruments. Was he waiting for something to happen?
Eventually I hopped into my cryobed too. I don't know how long Jeb stayed up.
Our probe was quietly flying along.
Was there even any plan for what we would do after this? It seemed like Jeb was just doing his own things at this point.
When I woke up again, Jeb was screaming!
"Look! Look! The speed! The altimeter!"
Supposedly, we were going more than 190 km/s, more than 20 times the speed of Kerbin's orbit. That couldn't be right. When did we ever have fuel to be able to reach that kind of speeds?
But then it hit me: The altitude. It was showing negative.
We were...
inside Kerbol!
And the probe was still picking up speed.
The instruments were going crazy. The one saying "apopsis" or some such was cycling between showing 2-point-somethingorother Gm, and an infinity symbol.
And then it all went silent. The instruments settled down.
I didn't get to see the exact number before, Jeb had again acted too fast.
He pushed something next to the speed readout and it switched to a unit I had not seen before.
It said, "2.801 % c".
The probe was beginning to shake violently.
It has been like that for maybe an hour now. The speed readout has not changed, but the altitude meter is still increasing at a terrible rate, showing 26 Gm now, about 2 AU.
Will we ever see Kerbin again?
And why had the ship designers been so insistent on that parachute pack anyway?
Kerbal Space Program mission code KOL-Dr/1, personal log, Bill Kerman
They had built a somewhat unusual rocket. It was not the usual fully symmetric designs we had seen in all the simulations. They promised it would bring us "closer to God" than any Kerbonaut before.
(.craft file, requires Challenger and Sunday Punch packs)
At least it was stable, the entire ascent out of Kerbin's atmosphere was smooth. We had been instructed to jettison the huge rockets on the side when they stopped firing, and engage the smaller rockets on the other axis. That was supposed to get us to outer space!
After that, just keep the main rocket engine firing until we passed 2.7 km/s, then turn it off and wait.
It would then be many weeks before the next maneuver. The control pod computer (didn't they call it "JCN"? -Bob) would wake us up, and then we were supposed to align the rocket with the direction of travel and fire the engines again.
After reaching a speed above 12 km/s, we turned the engines off again and went back to the cryobeds.
I think something went wrong at that point, because when we woke up again, more than a year had passed, according to the computer. I'm sure the mission plan had said it would only be half a year! I think I noticed Jeb's face looking somewhat different, not the usual huge grin all over... I'll make a drawing...
But we were at that time more than thirty-two million kilometers from our dear star Kerbol, nearly three standard astronomical units.
Then came the part of the mission plan I do remember clearly, it was something training had covered many times before: Counter-thrust to zero velocity.
Jeb insisted he would be the one to do this maneuver, and had already jumped to the instruments and bumped the throttle to maximum while letting out a huge wail, "Yeeee-haw!" He even jettisoned the long fuel tank and engine partway through, as if it was second nature.
It had seemed like a good idea at the time.
Bob just went straight back to sleep, but I was somewhat put off by the way Jeb kept staring at the instruments. Was he waiting for something to happen?
Eventually I hopped into my cryobed too. I don't know how long Jeb stayed up.
Our probe was quietly flying along.
Was there even any plan for what we would do after this? It seemed like Jeb was just doing his own things at this point.
When I woke up again, Jeb was screaming!
"Look! Look! The speed! The altimeter!"
Supposedly, we were going more than 190 km/s, more than 20 times the speed of Kerbin's orbit. That couldn't be right. When did we ever have fuel to be able to reach that kind of speeds?
But then it hit me: The altitude. It was showing negative.
We were...
inside Kerbol!
And the probe was still picking up speed.
The instruments were going crazy. The one saying "apopsis" or some such was cycling between showing 2-point-somethingorother Gm, and an infinity symbol.
And then it all went silent. The instruments settled down.
I didn't get to see the exact number before, Jeb had again acted too fast.
He pushed something next to the speed readout and it switched to a unit I had not seen before.
It said, "2.801 % c".
The probe was beginning to shake violently.
It has been like that for maybe an hour now. The speed readout has not changed, but the altitude meter is still increasing at a terrible rate, showing 26 Gm now, about 2 AU.
Will we ever see Kerbin again?
And why had the ship designers been so insistent on that parachute pack anyway?
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