@KerlonceauxIndustries fast fast
@SimpleFlow thanks a million brotha!
@ssenmodnar thank man
@cedblox332 it is very much like programming, if you can program in C, it's a piece of cake
@SnoWFLakE0s nvm I think I know what the problem is. By using the throttle as a multiplier within the the functions, the whole wave function contracts
@SnoWFLakE0s yes, but when I use them on pistons, the throttle increase isn't smooth. When I increase the throttle it acts as if the throttle was way past it's upper limit. Why does this happen?
@SnoWFLakE0s I found an issue. Why do sin and cos functions with a throttle variable inside them become twitchy?
@Solarisaircraft thx man!
Don't worry boys, the engineer is engihere
@USSR @WorldofWarships @FishMinerb thanks guys!
What is this apparatus?
@Saturnite thank you brotha
@Notaleopard no, Gunbuster
@WorldofWarships update time!
this is the definition of beauty
@Starlight you should watch it, 6 episodes
@Starlight this
How is that Gunbuster coming up?
@PointlessWhyshouldi no problemo
@99807 thanks pal'e
what's wrong?
I miss the time where I used to build small planes
Sweet land of liberty
Awesoome
@CenturiVonKikie not only that but it also increases thrust
@exosuit OH
@MintLynx make your plane moonwalk
@MintLynx wheels on heavy builds
... redo?
True
nice
You have a very fast drydock
@SnoWFLakE0s yeah, that's what I've been doing, but that way would be more intuitive.
Try an ornithopter
@jamesPLANESii the best solution I found was a stopwatch and the smooth(x,t) function
@tntwiley thx pardner
@SnoWFLakE0s I wondered if rotor outputted their current angle for other blocks to read
@Starlight GUNBUSTER
@Starlight DUDE
@ChisP thanks man
@ND40X here
Are ornithopters allowed?
Retrofuture, nice
@MrPorg137 thanks pal
@ThomasRoderick thank buddy
@SnoWFLakE0s do rotors output a readable value?
@KabouterWesley thanks pardner
@asteroidbook345 thank brotha
@KerlonceauxIndustries fast fast
+1@SimpleFlow thanks a million brotha!
@ssenmodnar thank man
@cedblox332 it is very much like programming, if you can program in C, it's a piece of cake
@SnoWFLakE0s nvm I think I know what the problem is. By using the throttle as a multiplier within the the functions, the whole wave function contracts
@SnoWFLakE0s yes, but when I use them on pistons, the throttle increase isn't smooth. When I increase the throttle it acts as if the throttle was way past it's upper limit. Why does this happen?
@SnoWFLakE0s I found an issue. Why do sin and cos functions with a throttle variable inside them become twitchy?
@Solarisaircraft thx man!
Don't worry boys, the engineer is engihere
@USSR @WorldofWarships @FishMinerb thanks guys!
What is this apparatus?
@Saturnite thank you brotha
@Notaleopard no, Gunbuster
@WorldofWarships update time!
this is the definition of beauty
@Starlight you should watch it, 6 episodes
@Starlight this
+1How is that Gunbuster coming up?
confused screaming
+1@PointlessWhyshouldi no problemo
@99807 thanks pal'e
what's wrong?
I miss the time where I used to build small planes
Sweet land of liberty
Awesoome
+1@CenturiVonKikie not only that but it also increases thrust
@exosuit OH
@MintLynx make your plane moonwalk
@MintLynx wheels on heavy builds
... redo?
True
nice
You have a very fast drydock
+1Fun fact:
@SnoWFLakE0s yeah, that's what I've been doing, but that way would be more intuitive.
Try an ornithopter
+1@jamesPLANESii the best solution I found was a stopwatch and the smooth(x,t) function
@tntwiley thx pardner
@SnoWFLakE0s I wondered if rotor outputted their current angle for other blocks to read
@Starlight GUNBUSTER
+1@Starlight DUDE
@ChisP thanks man
@ND40X here
Are ornithopters allowed?
Retrofuture, nice
@MrPorg137 thanks pal
@ThomasRoderick thank buddy
+1@SnoWFLakE0s do rotors output a readable value?
@KabouterWesley thanks pardner
@asteroidbook345 thank brotha