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Hi(gh)!
On 29.01.20 01:30, Ton wrote:
> It has been a while, but with Christmas and 2020 and a small holiday there was
> not much time for Povray.
> But the train is finished, now I have to put it somewhere, might be my next
> project.
What about putting the train in its genuine geographic environment? I'm
currently re-coding Melody's smooth mesh generator to make it run at an
acceptable speed (90 minutes rather than 200 days for 3601 by 3601
vertices...), after that, I will start generating 1 square degree Earth
surface slices (mesh2 terrain reliefs following Earth's curvature) from
ASTER GeoTIFFs, so you might want to place railway tracks on it... on
which line did the Edelweiss run?
Let's do POVEarth!
See you in Khyberspace (the Afghan section of POVEarth)!
Yadgar
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=?UTF-8?Q?J=c3=b6rg_=22Yadgar=22_Bleimann?= <yaz### [at] gmx de> wrote:
> Hi(gh)!
>
> On 29.01.20 01:30, Ton wrote:
> > It has been a while, but with Christmas and 2020 and a small holiday there was
> > not much time for Povray.
> > But the train is finished, now I have to put it somewhere, might be my next
> > project.
>
> What about putting the train in its genuine geographic environment? I'm
> currently re-coding Melody's smooth mesh generator to make it run at an
> acceptable speed (90 minutes rather than 200 days for 3601 by 3601
> vertices...), after that, I will start generating 1 square degree Earth
> surface slices (mesh2 terrain reliefs following Earth's curvature) from
> ASTER GeoTIFFs, so you might want to place railway tracks on it... on
> which line did the Edelweiss run?
>
> Let's do POVEarth!
>
> See you in Khyberspace (the Afghan section of POVEarth)!
>
> Yadgar
Hi Yadgar, interesting plan. I have at the moment something completely different
for my train in my mind.
Is your mesh2 detailed enough for this close?
Netherlands shouldn't be too difficult (flat!), but France and Switzerland open
some possibilities.
Cheers
Ton.
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"Ton" <ton### [at] gmail com> wrote:
> Is your mesh2 detailed enough for this close?
> Netherlands shouldn't be too difficult (flat!), but France and Switzerland open
> some possibilities.
>
> Cheers
> Ton.
That sounds to be maybe 25 miles on a side.
https://gis.stackexchange.com/questions/8495/converting-longitude-and-latitude-coordinates-to-square-miles
or maybe it's 70:
https://sciencing.com/convert-degrees-latitude-miles-5744407.html
anyway, there's definitely enough detail in certain map areas to do just what
you need:
http://news.povray.org/povray.binaries.images/thread/%3Cweb.5ce356f7d68a971b4eec112d0%40news.povray.org%3E/
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Am 1/28/20 7:31 PM, also sprach Ton:
> And here is the whole train.
>
It looks very nice. Shouldn't it have some kind of catenary pantograph?
Weird that none of the pictures show any kind of top electrical
connection. Was it a diesel?
(Thanks. I started looking at the TEE Edelweiss wikipedia page, and got
rabbitholed into Gotthard Base Tunnel and other Rail2000 projects. :) )
--
dik
Rendered 49,882,521,600 of 49,882,521,600 pixels (100%)
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Hi(gh)!
On 01.02.20 23:14, Ton wrote:
> Hi Yadgar, interesting plan. I have at the moment something completely different
> for my train in my mind.
What do you plan to do?
> Is your mesh2 detailed enough for this close?
3601 by 3601 data points per square degree result in about 30 metres per
data point (at the equator and along meridians, otherwise less).
> Netherlands shouldn't be too difficult (flat!),
...but I'll have to block out the sea from flooding the many depressions
by cutting prisms from the ocean globe!
but France and Switzerland open
> some possibilities.
La Montanara for the camera lens, as I prefer to say...
See you in Khyberspace!
Yadgar
>
> Cheers
> Ton.
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> > Hi Yadgar, interesting plan. I have at the moment something completely different
> > for my train in my mind.
> What do you plan to do?
I'll keep that a surprise. If it fails, or doesn't work out, I don't have to
apologize!
Maybe after I might have a look at some nice Alp-mountain or ridge.
Cheers
Ton.
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Hello everybody,
it has been a while, but I finally managed to model the bridge I wanted my
Edelweiss train to run on.
So after cancelled trips, cruises and occasional lockdowns here it is.
While setting up this image, I thought that it might be nice to have Titanic
sail underneath. So I think I'll raise the Titanic (That sounds like a movie
title!), and see whether I can render her again.
Cheers
Ton.
By the way, for people who don't recognize this bridge, it is based of the Forth
Bridge, not far from Edinburgh, in Scotland.
Post a reply to this message
Attachments:
Download 'bridge.png' (1156 KB)
Preview of image 'bridge.png'

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Op 21/08/2020 om 10:14 schreef Ton:
> Hello everybody,
>
> it has been a while, but I finally managed to model the bridge I wanted my
> Edelweiss train to run on.
> So after cancelled trips, cruises and occasional lockdowns here it is.
> While setting up this image, I thought that it might be nice to have Titanic
> sail underneath. So I think I'll raise the Titanic (That sounds like a movie
> title!), and see whether I can render her again.
>
> Cheers
> Ton.
>
> By the way, for people who don't recognize this bridge, it is based of the Forth
> Bridge, not far from Edinburgh, in Scotland.
>
Nicely done, sir! The Titanic becomes compulsory indeed.
--
Thomas
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"Ton" <ton### [at] gmail com> wrote:
> Hello everybody,
>
> it has been a while, but I finally managed to model the bridge I wanted my
> Edelweiss train to run on.
Excellent modelling. :)
Remind me, do you use a modeller? (Probably not.)
I made a version of the Forth Rail Bridge using Moray.
> So after cancelled trips, cruises and occasional lockdowns here it is.
> While setting up this image, I thought that it might be nice to have Titanic
> sail underneath. So I think I'll raise the Titanic (That sounds like a movie
> title!), and see whether I can render her again.
Make sure the Titanic's pilot isn't distracted by Stephenson's Rocket and hits
an iceberg ;)
>
> Cheers
> Ton.
>
> By the way, for people who don't recognize this bridge, it is based of the Forth
> Bridge, not far from Edinburgh, in Scotland.
At one time, I would have needed to take off my socks and shoes to count the
number of times I crossed it, in a year.
Stephen
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"Stephen" <mcavoys_AT_aolDOT.com> wrote:
> Make sure the Titanic's pilot isn't distracted by Stephenson's Rocket and hits
> an iceberg ;)
Or the bridge!
> At one time, I would have needed to take off my socks and shoes to count the
> number of times I crossed it, in a year.
>
> Stephen
About nine years we were living in West Yorkshire, and one of our UK trips was
our world tour of Scotland. We drove to Fort William. Spent two nights there,
and took the train to Mallaig and back. Then we drove via Loch Ness to Inverness
and Aviemore. Two nights there, and then on to Edinburgh, where we spent two
nights. On that trip we crossed the Forth on the road bridge (there was only
one, then), next to the rail bridge. I took some photos of the rail bridge then.
One of the memorable views in my life. A very impressive construction. So I
never crossed it, but I've seen it.
Cheers
Ton.
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