CAW Mod Archive
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
RE: CAW Mod Archive
Ha! Awesome...I think you've created the first fan site! Thanks for doing this.
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
RE: CAW Mod Archive
Updated it so that suggested stats are shown.
- Prince of Eckmühl
- Posts: 2459
- Joined: Sun Jun 25, 2006 4:37 pm
- Location: Texas
RE: CAW Mod Archive
This is very cool.
Thank you so much.
PoE
Thank you so much.
PoE
Government is the opiate of the masses.
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
- Staggerwing
- Posts: 99
- Joined: Sun Jun 03, 2007 7:54 pm
RE: CAW Mod Archive
Ryan,
Those look outstanding! How do you get the images smoothed out? I'm working on an F9c
and it's as jaggy as all get out but the image size seems too small to smooth much.
Also, when I extract a graphic from the editor or download one of yours the background
always comes out the wrong color, sometimes white and the 'glow' image is lost and
sometimes black and the 'shadows' are gone. I've tried poth PSP8 and MS Paint (which
does get the purple color right...)
Those look outstanding! How do you get the images smoothed out? I'm working on an F9c
and it's as jaggy as all get out but the image size seems too small to smooth much.
Also, when I extract a graphic from the editor or download one of yours the background
always comes out the wrong color, sometimes white and the 'glow' image is lost and
sometimes black and the 'shadows' are gone. I've tried poth PSP8 and MS Paint (which
does get the purple color right...)
- 82nd Airborne
- Posts: 61
- Joined: Tue Sep 05, 2000 8:00 am
- Location: Coquitlam, B.C., Canada
RE: CAW Mod Archive
very cool gents, now how do you add these planes to a scenario?
edit-figured it out
edit-figured it out
"I leave you, hoping that the lamp of liberty will burn in your bosoms until there shall no longer be a doubt that all men are created free and equal." - Abraham Lincoln
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
RE: CAW Mod Archive
Those look outstanding! How do you get the images smoothed out? I'm working on an F9c
and it's as jaggy as all get out but the image size seems too small to smooth much.
It's kind of complicated, but since you mentioned Paint Shop Pro 8; (I have that), I assume you know how to resize images down using "Resample using Smart Size"; and have looked vaguely at "layers".
Here's how you do it. First, you load up this image in PSP8.

Don't worry about the P-39s; they're there on the background as a "guide" to help place your new aircraft profiles correctly like the originals.
and it's as jaggy as all get out but the image size seems too small to smooth much.
It's kind of complicated, but since you mentioned Paint Shop Pro 8; (I have that), I assume you know how to resize images down using "Resample using Smart Size"; and have looked vaguely at "layers".
Here's how you do it. First, you load up this image in PSP8.

Don't worry about the P-39s; they're there on the background as a "guide" to help place your new aircraft profiles correctly like the originals.
- Attachments
-
- Background.gif (16.12 KiB) Viewed 1634 times
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
RE: CAW Mod Archive
Then you hit Layer Menu:
New Raster Layer
and proceed to place your resized images on that layer. When you're all done with your graphics, like adding shadows, etc etc etc,
select the background layer and delete it.
Your picture should look like this

File Menu
Save As
Select .png format
Options
Run Optimizer
Color Tab: Select 16.7 million colors
Transparency Tab: Select Alpha Channel Transparency and Existing Image or Layer Transparency
Format Tab: Non INterlaced
OK
then type in your file name like F9C.png.
BTW, you'll see that I included the PNG files in all of my mod downloads, because extracting from a SRF has problems at the moment.
New Raster Layer
and proceed to place your resized images on that layer. When you're all done with your graphics, like adding shadows, etc etc etc,
select the background layer and delete it.
Your picture should look like this

File Menu
Save As
Select .png format
Options
Run Optimizer
Color Tab: Select 16.7 million colors
Transparency Tab: Select Alpha Channel Transparency and Existing Image or Layer Transparency
Format Tab: Non INterlaced
OK
then type in your file name like F9C.png.
BTW, you'll see that I included the PNG files in all of my mod downloads, because extracting from a SRF has problems at the moment.
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
RE: CAW Mod Archive
USS Block Island and P-26A Peashooter now up
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
RE: CAW Mod Archive
You psychotic WWII:1946 wannabes have just got served: [:D]

The first really all new ship for CAW (new top down view and all that; my previous Block Island used a recycled stock CAW Casablanca top down view); with complete stats!
See, a year or two ago, I used a linedrawing of Midway from Norman Friedman's US Carriers to do a really nice shaded drawing for an alternate history, where there was no Washington Naval Treaty, and the Midways became sort of like the Essexes of that timeline, and I simply just reused that linedrawing to show Midway as she would have appeared in the Pacific in an extended WWII.
In the interests of playability and not clashing with existing carrier flight decks in the top down view, I decided to keep the flight deck as bare wood, instead of having it stained with MS-2 (as was done historically).

The first really all new ship for CAW (new top down view and all that; my previous Block Island used a recycled stock CAW Casablanca top down view); with complete stats!
See, a year or two ago, I used a linedrawing of Midway from Norman Friedman's US Carriers to do a really nice shaded drawing for an alternate history, where there was no Washington Naval Treaty, and the Midways became sort of like the Essexes of that timeline, and I simply just reused that linedrawing to show Midway as she would have appeared in the Pacific in an extended WWII.
In the interests of playability and not clashing with existing carrier flight decks in the top down view, I decided to keep the flight deck as bare wood, instead of having it stained with MS-2 (as was done historically).
- Attachments
-
- Midway.gif (32.03 KiB) Viewed 1670 times
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
RE: CAW Mod Archive
and if you're EVEN more psychotic, and want to fly B-25 sized bombers from the flight deck of a carrier....regularly....


- Attachments
-
- UnitedStates.gif (28.18 KiB) Viewed 1646 times
- Prince of Eckmühl
- Posts: 2459
- Joined: Sun Jun 25, 2006 4:37 pm
- Location: Texas
RE: CAW Mod Archive
I may have misunderstood your comments about the Midway, but didn't that class of ships have armoured flight decks?
PoE (aka ivanmoe)
PoE (aka ivanmoe)
Government is the opiate of the masses.
- Prince of Eckmühl
- Posts: 2459
- Joined: Sun Jun 25, 2006 4:37 pm
- Location: Texas
RE: CAW Mod Archive
Ahh, the United States, "the only aircraft carrier that the Air Force ever sank."
The project was scrapped after WW2 to provide more money for strategic bombers.
PoE (aka ivanmoe)
The project was scrapped after WW2 to provide more money for strategic bombers.
PoE (aka ivanmoe)
Government is the opiate of the masses.
-
- Posts: 188
- Joined: Wed Feb 09, 2005 1:17 pm
RE: CAW Mod Archive
.
"You men cheer when the battle is successful. When it isn't, you threaten hari-kari. You're acting like hysterical women."
Vice Admiral Ryunosuke Kusaka
Vice Admiral Ryunosuke Kusaka
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
RE: CAW Mod Archive
ORIGINAL: Prince of Eckmühl
I may have misunderstood your comments about the Midway, but didn't that class of ships have armoured flight decks?
PoE (aka ivanmoe)
Yes, they did; but they had wood over the armor deck, like how battleships had teak decks; mainly to keep heat down in the tropics.
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
- RyanCrierie
- Posts: 1327
- Joined: Fri Oct 14, 2005 7:15 am
- Contact:
RE: CAW Mod Archive
Boeing F8B-1 is now available...
FYI:
After nearly a decade of absence from the Navy register, the name Boeing reappeared when a contract was awarded for their mammoth XF8B-1. The proportions of this machine had been dictated by the Navy's need for a far-ranging carrier fighter capable of delivering a bomb load directly to the Japanese home islands. The requirements indicated that something more than just a fighter would be needed to fit this bill, so provision was made to include a bomber-type internal weapons bay. Two 1,600 pound bombs could be loaded into this compartment, and two more could be carried beneath the wings for a total of 6,400 pounds. Alternately, a pair of 2,000 pound torpedoes could be loaded on the wing racks. Six gun ports in the wings revealed the location of the .50 cal. machine guns on the prototype; but production fighters could use a sextet of 20 mm cannons as alternate armament.
The contract for three prototype XF8B-1's was handed to Boeing on May 4, 1943, but commitments for B-29 Superfortress bombers held development of the fighter to a slow pace. The power source selected was the Pratt & Whitney XR-4360-10 Wasp Major, the world's most powerful piston engine with over 3,000 hp. This engine was connected to a six-bladed contra-rotating Aeroproducts propeller with a thirteen-and-a-half foot diameter. The landing gear rotated and folded flat against the bottom of the wing.
November 27, 1944, was the day the big Boeing fighter first tested the atmosphere; and the XF8B-1 demonstrated a maximum speed of 432 mph at 26,900 feet. With a cruising speed of 162 mph, the bomber-fighter could deliver its load to a target 1,305 miles away in about eight hours. Fortunately, the end of the war precluded the need to consider a mission of such duration for the pilot of a single-seat airplane.
[X(][X(]
FYI:
After nearly a decade of absence from the Navy register, the name Boeing reappeared when a contract was awarded for their mammoth XF8B-1. The proportions of this machine had been dictated by the Navy's need for a far-ranging carrier fighter capable of delivering a bomb load directly to the Japanese home islands. The requirements indicated that something more than just a fighter would be needed to fit this bill, so provision was made to include a bomber-type internal weapons bay. Two 1,600 pound bombs could be loaded into this compartment, and two more could be carried beneath the wings for a total of 6,400 pounds. Alternately, a pair of 2,000 pound torpedoes could be loaded on the wing racks. Six gun ports in the wings revealed the location of the .50 cal. machine guns on the prototype; but production fighters could use a sextet of 20 mm cannons as alternate armament.
The contract for three prototype XF8B-1's was handed to Boeing on May 4, 1943, but commitments for B-29 Superfortress bombers held development of the fighter to a slow pace. The power source selected was the Pratt & Whitney XR-4360-10 Wasp Major, the world's most powerful piston engine with over 3,000 hp. This engine was connected to a six-bladed contra-rotating Aeroproducts propeller with a thirteen-and-a-half foot diameter. The landing gear rotated and folded flat against the bottom of the wing.
November 27, 1944, was the day the big Boeing fighter first tested the atmosphere; and the XF8B-1 demonstrated a maximum speed of 432 mph at 26,900 feet. With a cruising speed of 162 mph, the bomber-fighter could deliver its load to a target 1,305 miles away in about eight hours. Fortunately, the end of the war precluded the need to consider a mission of such duration for the pilot of a single-seat airplane.
[X(][X(]
- 82nd Airborne
- Posts: 61
- Joined: Tue Sep 05, 2000 8:00 am
- Location: Coquitlam, B.C., Canada
RE: CAW Mod Archive
Any chance you could do a Bearcat, and P38? [:)]
"I leave you, hoping that the lamp of liberty will burn in your bosoms until there shall no longer be a doubt that all men are created free and equal." - Abraham Lincoln