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  1. #11
    300+ Forum Addict notgotaclue's Avatar
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    Re: Building a jet cockpit

    Quote Originally Posted by jawskk View Post
    thats a brilliant idea!!! might well do that
    any chance of a motion plate aswell?? i jk lol ,
    way to expensive thinking i know
    thanks alot!! gunna do this!!
    Mike
    Mike,
    That is the exact reason I told you to slow down and take your time.
    We have all been there - got excited about one thing and then gone off in a completely different direction
    This hobby is not cheap and it is a pain in the rear to build something and then change your ideas.
    Been there - done that, stopped short of buying the t-shirt..
    I spent a few months building my MIP, decided I didn't like it so bought one.
    The one I spent months building was taken apart in a hour and most of my hard work was binned BUT I knew I wasnt happy so just bit the bullet.
    I dont want you to make the same mistakes.
    This hobby is a marathon - not the 100 metres.
    Allan.

  2. #12
    1000+ Poster - Fantastic Contributor
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    Re: Building a jet cockpit

    Agree with Allan....totally!

    I am building a Cessna 152 sim and at the same time I was just a click away from ordering the CNC cutting of my Airbus A320 panels. It would of meant that I would have the whole MIP, the stand, the pedestal and control stick boxes left and right. It would of meant that I would have the basics of a great A320 sim. I even had the Airbus FCU panels plus EFIS panels, a joystick, monitor for MIP etc and had all the drawings to cut all the other panels (even the overhead)....

    But the lesson is this....

    I didn't go ahead, why? Because I would never of been able to afford all of the electronics, interfaces and computers to run even a basic sim. I cant justify paying £200 for an airbus radio, or £500-700 for the Airbus FCU or the £400 for the MCDU. Then there was the computer to run it, the expensive software, then there's the throttle, overhead, pedestal panels, wires, cables, electronic components, paints finishings, fixings, screws and the list goes on and on and on. I struggled to pay for my goflight radio, so how on earth would I fill an A320? The answer is...I wouldnt, I couldn't and the project would flop and fail and be the biggest waste of hard earn't money. I would have the obsolete cockpit sitting in my garage that does nothing (or could be a climbing frame for my son).

    But I so wanted a jet cockpit, with fancy visuals, everyone else was building them, so why couldn't I? Because I am on minimum wage at a hotel with a family to look after...

    But.....

    Because I didn't go ahead with the A320, it meant that I could throw the money into a smaller project. I built a Cessna 152 sim instead. My sim is the full C152 instrument panel with LCD gauges, goflight avionics, flight yoke, switches and buttons etc and a dedicated pc to run it (well 2 actually). I thought a C152 would cost about £300-500, so was do-able (its actually cost me about £800 so far, because of the cost of computers, cnc work, wood, avionics etc)....But...the sim console is nearly done, and its close to being all hooked up now which is given me the enthusiasm and determination to build...and fly!

    All these fancy cockpits with £1000's spent on them are really nice, and full respect to the builders, they have the money to do it, but I don't! Does it bother me? totally no! Why, coz I have built my own sim, okay its not a jet, but, my plane probably taught airline pilots to fly in the first place!

    Just go with your ability and budget, temptation to grander projects will get you no where. Learn with what you have got and expand with your available resources, be inspired by others and keep your cockpit building passion alive!

    Don't worry buddy, we are all here to help!

    By the way I found this: http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Flight-Sim...#ht_500wt_1076

    Alex
    Last edited by CessnaGuy; 02-21-2012 at 12:09 PM.
    GA or the Highway!

  3. #13
    Our new friend needs to reach 10 posts to get to the next flight level
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    Re: Building a jet cockpit

    Thanks alot! makes so much sense!! gunna take it all on board and thanks for the link
    Mike

  4. #14
    Our new friend needs to reach 10 posts to get to the next flight level
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    Re: Building a jet cockpit

    Hi, I'm building an F16, but starting with gathering CAD files and learning about all the links I need to go to for different parts. I do a lot of searching on the net to see what others have done, what worked and what didn't.

    I agree with everyone when they say you need to really take your time and do some homework first. It's easy to get caught up in all the glamour, but it's so worth it if you really take the time to know what you want. No one wants to sink hundreds of dollars into a hobby and then change their mind and sell the items for next to nothing.

    This is not my first sim, I helped my husband build his B737 cockpit over the last 10 years or so and now it's my turn but wanted to go with something smaller and flies faster. Did I mention that I have a B727 cockpit sitting in my driveway? it's been there 2 years. A bigger building needs to go up inorder to work on that sim.

    Placement of your sim might be another thing you need to look at. If you live in an apartment, how happy are your neighbors going to be when they think a Jet is going to land on them? Just a thought.

  5. #15
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    Re: Building a jet cockpit

    Mike, if you scroll a little but up to my other post, you will find a link to a forum which is specialized on F-16 cockpit builders. They have drawings, plans, lots of help with electronics, even realistic panels.
    You might not have seen my post before because I'm a new user and as such, if I make a post with a link, this has to be checked by a moderator for SPAM, which took like 24h, so it just appeared without notice between all the others which were made in this 24h...
    Stefan's little Flightgear corner | The Finnish Weather Center
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  6. #16
    300+ Forum Addict jmig's Avatar
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    Re: Building a jet cockpit

    I have a fighter cockpit. (see my avatar photo) I spend two years researching before I started building.
    John

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  7. #17
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    Re: Building a jet cockpit

    Sorry to resurrect an old thread! But if you're one of the guys who's been researching how to build your own jet cockpit, google has likely led you here, and there's not much up-to-date stuff around on the subject. So, I'd like to share a new resource with you. It's geared towards the folks that don't have a big garage or a lot of power tools and want to get into the "home cockpit" club. With new technologies and peripherals now available, it's very simple and (relatively) cheap to create the effect of a high-fidelity wrap-around simulator in your living room for a few hundred dollars, depending on what things you already own. The approach, which relies on VR or new large displays to generate the cockpit, allows the same setup to be an F 16 cockpit one day and an airliner flight deck the next. I'm sure what is presented won't be news to many here, but for the newbies looking to get into the hobby, who may have just arrived, it could be a valuable resource. I've been living in apartments and flight simming for years, so I'm fully invested in the approach as it were. The site is recently launched, and will grow with content and tips with time. Check it out if you're interested, and feel free to send feedback!

    http://www.homejetcockpit.com

  8. #18
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    Re: Building a jet cockpit

    doublepost, sorry!
    Last edited by Jetpit; 10-11-2016 at 04:44 PM. Reason: doublepost

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