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1991-08-18
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______________________________________________________________
MICROSCENE SCENERY
HAWAIIAN ISLANDS
______________________________________________________________
Microsoft and MS-DOS are registered trademarks of
Microsoft Corporation. Flight Simulator is a registered
trademark of SugLOGIC Corporation. IBM and PC-DOS
are registered trademarks of International Business
Machines Corporation. Hercules is a registered trademark
of Hercules Computer Technology.
______________________________________________________________
------SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS-------------------------------------
-MS-DOS or PC-DOS operating system version 2.0 or later
-Personal computer using 80286 or higher processor recommended
-640K memory
-Hard drive
-CGA, EGA (EGA requires 256K display memory), MCGA, VGA, or
Hercules graphics adapter (16 color recommended)
-Microsoft Flight Simulator version 4.0
-Microsoft Aircraft and Scenery Designer
------INSTALLATION--------------------------------------------
These scenery disks require Microsoft Flight Simulator
version 4 and Microsoft Aircraft and Scenery Designer.
Those products should be installed on your hard disk
before installing the scenery.
1) Insert the scenery disks into your floppy disk drive
and copy their contents onto your hard disk in the
Flight Simulator directory.
COPY A:*.* C:\FLTSIM4
Replace "A:" and/or "C:" drive letters as required
by your system.
2) Start Flight Simulator and select the default startup
mode. Do not yet select any of the new modes provided
with this scenery.
3) Select menu #1 (MODE)
4) Select option J (SCENERY DESIGN)
5) Select option 0 (Setup Configuration)
6) Set the following configuration values:
A - 56000
B - 6000
C - 20
and press ENTER to save the configuration.
7) Exit Flight Simulator and restart it. You are now ready to
select any of the modes within your new scenery and start
flying.
8) Whenever you use this scenery be sure that the following
options on the SCENERY DESIGN Menu are selected "ON".
AUTO STATIC SCENERY SELECTION
AUTO DYNAMIC SCENERY SELECTION
Furthermore, you should set "Ground Texture" to "OFF" on
the "SIM" menu.
NOTE: This scenery is designed to properly overlay and enhance
the default scenery provided with Flight Simulator.
Proper operation and blending with any other optional
third party scenery is not assured.
IF YOU SEE MESSAGES ABOUT MEMORY SHORTAGES
Flight Simulator version 4 requires a large amount of free
memory. During installation you configured Flight Simulator
to request even more memory than it uses by default in order
to accomodate these high density scenery files. If there is
not adequate memory available for all features of Flight
Simlulator, selected features will be disabled. But your
new scenery will still function properly. Refer to your
Aircraft and Scenery Designer manual page 9 for suggestions
concerning memory usage.
------MAKING THE MOST OF YOUR VISIT TO HAWAII-----------------
The scenery in the Hawaii region is quite dense and
detailed in many areas. Additionally, the islands of
Maui, Kahoolawe, Oahu and Kauai have dynamic scenery.
To best view the scenery stay low and slow. While the
business jet may be a fast way to journey between the
islands it is usually inappropriate for general scenery
viewing (although you may find it usefull for attaining
the altitudes needed to reach the mountain summits on
Maui and Hawaii).
The Cessna is a good allround mix of speed, climbing
ability and manuverability. In some very high density
areas such as Honolulu/Waikiki or the Kaanapali area
on Maui you may prefer the Sopwith.
Stay below 2500 feet to view the denser building areas
in the cities and resorts. You may prefer to stay very
low (500 feet or less). The closer you get, the more
visible the denser scenery will become.
Although all NAVAIDS necessary for high altitude night
flying and such are included; these scenery files are
intended for VIEWING rather than navigating. Due to
performance limitations, these dense scenery regions each
cover fairly small surface areas. At very high altitudes, the
current scenery region will be BELOW you rather than in
front of you.
Furthermore, in order to increase the quantity of colors
used in the scenery, compromises have been made which may
cause the scenery to have unrealistic appearances if viewed
at night. Once again, this scenery is intended for VIEWING.
Microsoft recommends an 80286 or above processor for use
with Aircraft and Scenery Designer. This is because of the
lower performance considerations of the earlier CPUs.
Although these scenery regions will operate on slower
hardware; we also recommend an 80286 or above processor.
If you encounter slow aircraft response you should try the
following:
-Turn OFF ground texture. There is no need for ground
texture in these regions anyway.
-Set Crash to DETECT or OFF rather than DETECT AND ANALYZE.
DETECT AND ANALYZE needs to constantly record flight
statistics.
-Select a lower image complexity setting (COMPLEX, MEDIUM,
SPARSE) on menu 2 - display control. This setting affects
the distance over which scenery will be displayed. In certain
areas and altitudes you may wish to experiment with this
setting. For example, at high altitudes over a city, you will
probably wish to use a COMPLEX setting. But while flying down
a street, SPARSE may be perfectly adequate and will improve
response.
-Fly LOW and SLOW. The slower plane initiates less severe
scenery changes. Flying low also limits the amount of scenery
which must be updated.
-Switch dynamic weather OFF. Flight Simulator will have
less work to accomplish between screen updates.
-Switch dynamic scenery OFF. You will lose some detail,
particulary at airports, but again, Flight Simulator
will have less scenery to update.
-As a last resort, consider upgrading to an 80386
processor or a VGA video system. Flight Simulator will
perform best in those hardware environments.
We believe that you will enjoy the Hawaii scenery regions
regardless of your system or previous experience with
Flight Simulator. We have taken great care to assure the
accuracy of this scenery. Positioning, color, shape and
overall appearance of details as small as buildings, roads,
city streets and streams have been designed to the maximum
possible accuracy. Consider, if you will, that it would be
perfectly valid to use this scenery as a high quality road
map; and in some areas as an accurate city street map.
If you needed to find your way from the airport to your
hotel, you could do so!
Care has been taken in many ways to assure that your
flight around the Hawaiian Islands will be as close
as possible to the real thing without actually having
to travel there.
Enjoy and explore beautiful Hawaii.
______________________________________________________________
NAVIGATING IN HAWAII
______________________________________________________________
The Hawaiian Islands have been positioned at their
correct latitudes and longitudes in the real world.
It is entirely posible to fly from anywhere in Flight
Simulator's world to or from Hawaii; although the flight
will be quite long.
Many startup modes are provided that place you at a
selection of airports, ready for takeoff, in Hawaii.
The distances between the individual islands are not
great. In fact it is possible to fly between the islands
relying only on visual information with two exceptions.
-The large island of Hawaii is not visible from its
closest neighbor Maui nor is Maui visible from Hawaii.
You may use the VORs on Maui and Hawaii to assist.
The charts provide recommended bearings between specific
points on these islands.
-Kauai and Oahu are not visible from each other. Use the VORs
or consult the charts for recommended bearings.
Maui, Kahoolawe and Lanai are all visible from each other.
Molokai is visible from western Maui and Lanai. Maui and
Lanai are visible from Molokai. Oahu is visible from western
Molokai and Molokai from eastern Oahu. Kauai and Niihau are
visible from each other.
The scenery consists of 12 individual scenery regions;
some of which are quite small. When you view a distant
island you will be seeing only a limited amount of the
detailed scenery actually available on that island. The
detail, at such a time, is reserved for the closer island.
To view detailed scenery on an island you must fly quite
near to that island. As you do so, the area of detail
will change to the local island. Flight Simulator will
retain an active scenery area until you actually fly
into another scenery area. To cause the detailed scenery
to switch to another island, generally, you must fly within
just a few miles of the shoreline of that island.
Since you have Aircraft & Scenery Designer, you can,
of course, modify any of this scenery yourself, if you
so desire. We highly recommend that you not modify scenery
region boundaries in any way. Great care has been taken
to assure the smoothest possible overlap of scenery regions.
Overlapping regions are perfectly synchronized and dimensions
and centers of regions are highly tuned for maximum
consistency. If you add or modify the scenery, be aware that
in many instances, any individual scenery item may actually
exist in several different scenery regions. For example,
the coastline and mountains of Lanai actually exist in
six different scenery regions. If you were to modify
that scenery within the Lanai region itself, that change
would have no effect on Lanai's appearance as viewed from
any of the other five regions in which Lanai is included.
______________________________________________________________
THINGS TO SEE IN HAWAII
______________________________________________________________
------HAWAII--------------------------------------------------
Hawaii is called the big island. It is the largest by far
of the Hawaiian Islands. Larger, in fact, than all the
other islands put together.
There are five mountain areas on Hawaii. The Kohala Range
(maximum 5480') forms the northwest tip. Snow topped Mauna
Kea (summit 13,796') is the next mountain southward. Along
the west coast (Kona Coast) is Hualalai (summit 8271').
Mauna Loa (summit 13,679') is the largest mountain on the
island. In fact, if measured from the ocean floor, its the
largest mountain in the world. Even if only viewed above
water, it is still an impresively large mountain filling
the whole southern half of the island. Due east of the
summit of Mauna Loa, near the southeast coast, is Kilauea
(4078'), the present home of Pele, Goddess of the Volcano.
Due to the size of the island and the relatively high
altitudes of some of the mountains, you may find that the
business jet is the most practical plane for just getting
around on Hawaii. However, there is still a great deal of
low altitude, high density scenery as well as several
tight, twisting canyons to be seen and flown; which may be
better accomplished in a slower aircraft.
The largest airport on Hawaii is General Lyman Field at Hilo
on the central east coast. The Keahole airport serves the
Kailua/Kona area on the central west coast. There are several
other smaller airports scattered around the island.
Things to see on Hawaii:
-The Kona coast north of Keahole airport and the several
large resorts in that area (also known as the Waikoloa
area).
-The Kona coast south of Keahole airport around and south
of the town of Kailua (also known as Kona).
-The Waipio valley (and its neighbor the Waimanu Valley)
along the northeast coast near the southernmost end of
the Kohala Range. Waipio is the more southerly of the
two valleys.
-The summit caldera area of Mauna Loa. The caldera floor
is at 12,000'. The rim varies from 12,500' to 13,679'.
-The Southwest Rift Zone of Mauna Loa along the ridge
stretching south from the Mauna Loa summit/caldera area.
Just along the ridge is a series of disconnected cracks
(some long, some short, some quite deep, all narrow).
Fly down from the summit keeping as close to the ridge
crest as possible and drop into the cracks when possible.
-The Northeast Rift Zone of Mauna Loa along the ridges
stretching north and east of the summit/caldera area
has fewer cracks than the Southwest Rift, but has several
peaks to dodge and turn between.
-The Kilauea area and Hawaii Volcanoes National Park.
The Kilauea caldera (Halemaumau) is at 3412' and the rim
varies from 3652' to 4078'. A few miles northeast of
the actual Kilauea caldera along the East Rift Zone
you will see Pele at work enlarging the island of Hawaii.
Just north of that is the city of Hilo and its airport.
------MAUI----------------------------------------------------
Maui is known as the valley isle. Haleakala Volcano (summit
10,023') forms the east part of the island and the West Maui
Mts (5788') form the west end. Between is a large, heavily
irragated valley where large quantities of sugar cane and
pineapples are grown. Maui is a major resort island;
with large hotels along the west and south coasts.
Maui has three airports. The largest is at Kahului on the
north central coast. There is a small airport at Hana on
the northeast corner of the island; and the West Maui airport
serves the Kaanapali/Kahana resort area on the west coast.
While on Maui be sure to visit the following areas:
-The northeast coastline from Kahului to Hana.
-The summit area of Haleakala Volcano National Park. The caldera
varies from 7000 to 8000 feet and the rim from 9000 to 10,023.
-The Iao gorge in the West Maui Mts west of Kahului. Look
for the Iao Needle deep inside at the head of the canyon.
-The beach resorts at Makena and Wailea on the south coast
and at Lahaina, Kaanapali, Kahana and Kapalua on the west
coast.
-The marine sanctuary at Molokini Island just southwest of the
Makena area between Maui and Kahoolawe.
------KAHOOLAWE---------------------------------------------------
Kahoolawe has been uninhabited since it was taken over by the
US Navy for use as a bombing and gunnery range on Dec. 8, 1941
(the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor). Being in the rain
shadow of Maui, it is quite arrid and near lifeless.
Set the position 13456.0584 N, 56649.4420 E, 1800' altitude,
heading 227 to watch two F14s make a crossing run over
Kahoolawe.
There are no airports on Kahoolawe.
------LANAI-------------------------------------------------------
Lanai is known as the pineapple isle, and is owned by Dole
Pineapple. There is one airport near the southwest corner
of the island. The mountains reach their summit at Lanaihale
(3370').
While on Lanai you may wish to explore the following areas:
-Lanai City just northeast of the airport.
-The southwest coastline from the harbor at Kaumalapau around
south and east to the recreation and resort area at Manele Bay.
-------MOLOKAI----------------------------------------------------
Molokai is almost two different islands in one. The western
end of the island is mostly low hills and is largely owned
by the Molokai Ranch. The eastern end is high rugged mountains
dropping straight to the ocean.
There are two airports on Molokai. The largest is the
Hoolehua airport roughly in the center of the island. There
is also a small local airport on the Kalaupapa penninsula
on the central north coast.
While on Molokai you should visit:
-The northeast Molokai coastline from Kalaupapa east. There
are several deep canyons reaching up into the mountains
which attain 4970 feet at Kamakou.
-The southeast coastline east from the main city and port of
Kaunakakai. The coast is dotted with dozens of fish ponds.
-The isolated Kalaupapa penninsula; once site of the infamous
leper colony.
-The Papohaku beach resort area near the middle of the west coast.
-------OAHU--------------------------------------------------------
Oahu is the most populous of the Hawaiian islands. The center
of that population is Honolulu on the south coast.
Oahu is formed by two mountain ranges, the Koolau Range along
the northeast (3105' maximum at Puu Konahuanui north of
Honolulu) and the Waianae Range along the southwest (4040'
maximum at Kaala). Between are a large valley and Pearl Harbor.
There are many airports on Oahu. All are military except
Honolulu International (which actually shares its runways
with nearby Hickam AFB) and Dillingham (which once was an
AFB but is now mostly used by gliders and parachute jumpers).
While on Oahu be sure to visit:
-Waikiki beach and the many high rise hotels in this area.
See if you can fly between the buildings down Kalakaua
or Kuhio streets. (The Sopwith is recommended).
-Downtown Honolulu and the port of Honolulu including the
Dole Pineapple plant just west of the downtown area and the
famous Aloha Tower in the port area.
-Honolulu International and Hickam AFB.
-The Pearl Harbor area including the Arizona Memorial on the east
side of Ford Island and the Aloha Stadium just northeast of
Pearl Harbor. See if you can fly the Sopwith down inside the
stadium. You might even be able to land on the football
field.
-The coastlines of Oahu, particularly from Diamond Head around
to Kaneohe Bay and the Kaneohe Bay area. There are various
resorts scattered along the coasts at Kahala, Makaha and
Turtle Bay. There are also many detailed objects in the Barbers
point area, including an oil refinery and a power plant.
SPECIAL NOTE FOR THE HONOLULU AREA: Because of the extreme
scenery density in the Honolulu and Waikiki areas you may
wish to change the image complexity setting to "COMPLEX".
Doing so will decrease aircraft responsiveness, but will
also allow you to view detail that might otherwise not
be visible. Normally this would only be appropriate at
relatively high altitudes. But the density of scenery here
places that altitude limit as low as about 2000 feet.
-------KAUAI--------------------------------------------------------
Kauai is called the garden isle and is the wetest of the
islands. The summit area of the island at Kawaikini (5170')
is considered to be the wetest spot on earth, getting
500" of rain each year.
There are countless canyons on the island. Waimea Canyon is the
largest of these.
Lihue is the largest airport on Kauai and is your startup mode
for the Kauai and Niihau area.
While on Kauai be sure to visit:
-Waimea canyon; which is the westernmost canyon along the
south coast. There are many secondary canyons heading
rightward toward the highest peaks. Be prepared to climb
rapidly to over 4000' at the heads of any of these canyons.
-The Na Pali coast along the northwest coastline. The
mountains here drop from over 4000' straight to the ocean.
-The Hanalei Bay/Princeville resort area on the north central
coast (just east of the Na Pali coast).
-The Wailua resort area along the east coast north of Lihue.
-The Lihue area and the port and resorts there.
-The Poipu resort area near the southeast corner of the island.
-Wainiha canyon on the north coast (first major canyon east
of the Na Pali) where the Wainiha Pali rises 4000' above
the canyon.
-------NIIHAU-------------------------------------------------------
Niihau is privately owned by the Robinson family. Fewer than
300 people live on this island where Hawaiian is the primary
language.
Niihau is known as the forbidden island. Access is limited
to members of the Robinson family, the local residents,
visitors specifically approved by the Robinsons and an
occasional doctor or tax official. Niihau has no port or
airport, only one paved road and only three small villages.
The island is small and arrid, being in the lee of Kauai.
The mountains attain 1281' at Mt Paniau along the northeast
coast. The southern portion contains Hawaii's largest
natural lake, Lake Halalii.
Just off the northwest tip of Niihau is the island of Lehua;
formed by the tip of a volcano just extending above sea level.
About 20 miles south (bearing 170 degrees) from the southernmost
tip of Niihau is the islet of Kaula.
-------THE LEEWARD ISLANDS------------------------------------------
NIHOA, NECKER, FRENCH FRIGATE SHOALS, GARDINER PINNACLES,
MARO REEF, LAYSAN, LISIANSKI, PEARL and HERMES REEFS,
MIDWAY ISLANDS, KURE ATOLL
The Leeward Islands are the most ancient of the Hawaiian
Island chain; stretching over 1200 miles north and west of
Kauai. They are the erroded remnants of once green and high
islands that were made when Pele was much younger. They
stretch like a chain of dozens of gems across the vast blue
Pacific. The business jet is certainly the plane of choice
for visiting these remote islands.
You have three starting points for your exploration - Kauai,
the Coast Guard station on Tern Island in French Frigate Shoals
and the Naval Station on Midway Island.