As background for your Plane Plotter display, you can use either an image (which you may need to calibrate) or outlines (vectors) which have the advantge of maintaining their quality as you zoom into an area. If you have charts for Ship Plotter, or outlines from BaseStation, you can use those, or other data from the Internet:
You can enter a marker for your home location by using the Options, Home location... menu. You will be presented with a dialog box, where you enter your latitude and longitude. Both values are entered as degreees and decimal minutes, so north 50 degrees, 7 minutes and 30 seconds would be entered as N55 7.500. From Plane Plotter V4.7.9 onwards, you can design your own graphic for your home location. Enter Help, Search, "bitmap" for more details on how to make the bitmap, and name your bitmap "homelocationsymbol.bmp", and place it in the Plane Plotter main directory. You can also define your own symbols for waypoints, track and routes in GPX overlay files should you wish.
The colour of the icon denotes the data source:
Notes:
Originally type 3 were all live and therefore in yellow and types 6 and 7 were delayed and therefore orange. In more recent versions, because there are patches and updates that make that generalisation no longer valid, the colour for 3, 6 and 7 types changes from yellow to
orange as the report goes out of date. If you set the "Omit after" time to 5 minutes or more, you will see orange symbols at the limit of your range where the last report from a receding aircraft gradually becomes out of date until it disappears at the "Omit after" time.
Use the Options, Chart, Options menu, or the spanner icon on the toolbar. Labels panel ==> Label colours (local / shared). Click on the buttons to change the colours. I have mine set to yellow / cyan.
Plane Plotter does nothing on its own to create routes from Flight Numbers. There are two free add-ons available from the group's Files area (Find Flight and Flight Display, written by Plane Plotter users) which will work alongside Plane Plotter to provide route information as best they can. Use the Options, Chart, Options dialog (spanner symbol) to select what text information to display. If you do not like the route information provided by other users when downloading data, just uncheck the "Accept shared route info" box in the Options, Sharing, Setup dialog.
The altitude 33,333 is a dummy value. Plane Plotter puts it into HFDL reports so that the Google-Earth cockpit view would give a nice view (altitude zero is not a nice view) and it cannot be confused with a real cruising level.
From the Help information: If a Mode-S report includes speed and heading, the symbol is a directed outline of an aircraft. If no speed and direction are available, a triangular symbol is used. In the case of Mode-S or HFDL messages, if PlanePlotter receives a succession of position reports, it will attempt to calculate the speed and heading from the vector between reports. In this case, the heading and speed may be subject to jitter because the samples may be closely spaced and the positions are quantized.
Bev explains: "At the foot of the display, you will see three numbers, separated by slashes. These numbers are the number of aircraft received in this session, the number of messages received and the number of messages with positions. Note: if you are using PlanePlotter with the SBS1 (with the log file access method) the number of messages will be the same as the number of positions, because every message is a position report."
PlanePlotter gives you the option to display flags next to any or all of your aircraft. The command to view flags is:
Option>Define>Enable
Once you have Defined where your bsflags.txt file is, select Enable.
You can then select the option to view flags by going to:
VIEW>AIRCRAFT (FLAGGED).
HOWEVER, before you view flags you must:
Both are available in the PlanePlotter Yahoogroup Files section.
You can have as many bsflags.txt files as you like i.e., military, civil, special. Just Define in PP each time which one you wish to view.
It is as simple as that.
Pat Carty
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