Does it also come in black?you have to use the insert image function to show it though.
My favorite Ferrari is still the low cost Ferrari 430 spider - it's just beautiful.
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Does it also come in black?you have to use the insert image function to show it though.
My favorite Ferrari is still the low cost Ferrari 430 spider - it's just beautiful.
![]()
I'd post my favourite Ferrari, but I'd rather not get banned before page 1000.you have to use the insert image function to show it though.
My favorite Ferrari is still the low cost Ferrari 430 spider - it's just beautiful.
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well, drive in the outback at night with lights off, then it is black.Does it also come in black?
It does if you run it in Odyssey mode.Does it also come in black?
In Odyssey Renderer, it looks black, is that good enough?Does it also come in black?
It does if you run it in Odyssey mode.
So, what you are telling me is that it looks red while in the cockpit, but as soon as I get out it looks black?In Odyssey Renderer, it looks black, is that good enough?
you have to use the insert image function to show it though.
My favorite Ferrari is still the low cost Ferrari 430 spider - it's just beautiful.
![]()
In Odyssey Renderer, it looks black, is that good enough?
I see a red door and I want it painted black.Does it also come in black?
do you want to drive it or look at it - while driving the only thing in the cockpit you see is the rpm meter - to keep it between 6500 and 8000 rpm. And that is yellow.So, what you are telling me is that it looks red while in the cockpit, but as soon as I get out it looks black?
Hmm... Yeah, OK, that'll work![]()
Black, you say?So, what you are telling me is that it looks red while in the cockpit, but as soon as I get out it looks black?
Hmm... Yeah, OK, that'll work![]()
They tried that before, and now we have the giant's causeway...Back to the game and to ship interiors. Though, please be aware: This is not the usual complaining.
If taken seriously ship interiors could really be improved by incorporating some ideas of the Raumpatrouille approach back in the 60s:
As the series' budget was comparatively low, the set designers resorted to using modified common everyday objects; for instance, electric irons, inverted clock pendulums, washing-machine console parts and designer pencil sharpeners were used as props control panels, sewing thread coils and banana plugs as futuristic machine parts, and plastic cups as ceiling lights. Many panels were produced by the then-newly invented thermoforming process. Much designer furniture was also used, notably Ludwig Mies van der Rohe's 258-type couch, Harry Bertoia's Diamond-type armchair, Yrjö Kukkapuro's Karuselli-type armchair, Charles Eames's Aluminium group #EA105 chair, George Nelson's DAF Chair and Eero Saarinen's Tulpe table/chair combo. Joe Colombo's famous Smoke-type drinking glasses were used throughout the series.
The stage designer was Rolf Zehetbauer, who later won an Academy Award for his work on Cabaret.
"We had no money available and yet we were instructed to produce an elaborate science-fiction series. We were forced to improvise in all aspects. This ruled out completely manufacturing the spaceship's equipment from scratch. So we used existing things that we could adapt," is how Zehetbauer described the design work of the set.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raump...ffes_Orion#Special_effects_and_set_decoration
One of the pieces they used was a mine sharper:
View attachment 245509
Back to the game and to ship interiors. Though, please be aware: This is not the usual complaining.
If taken seriously ship interiors could really be improved by incorporating some ideas of the Raumpatrouille approach back in the 60s:
As the series' budget was comparatively low, the set designers resorted to using modified common everyday objects; for instance, electric irons, inverted clock pendulums, washing-machine console parts and designer pencil sharpeners were used as props control panels, sewing thread coils and banana plugs as futuristic machine parts, and plastic cups as ceiling lights. Many panels were produced by the then-newly invented thermoforming process. Much designer furniture was also used, notably Ludwig Mies van der Rohe's 258-type couch, Harry Bertoia's Diamond-type armchair, Yrjö Kukkapuro's Karuselli-type armchair, Charles Eames's Aluminium group #EA105 chair, George Nelson's DAF Chair and Eero Saarinen's Tulpe table/chair combo. Joe Colombo's famous Smoke-type drinking glasses were used throughout the series.
The stage designer was Rolf Zehetbauer, who later won an Academy Award for his work on Cabaret.
"We had no money available and yet we were instructed to produce an elaborate science-fiction series. We were forced to improvise in all aspects. This ruled out completely manufacturing the spaceship's equipment from scratch. So we used existing things that we could adapt," is how Zehetbauer described the design work of the set.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raump...ffes_Orion#Special_effects_and_set_decoration
One of the pieces they used was a mine sharper:
View attachment 245509
I've been there ... didn't see any electric irons nor pencil sharpeners ...giant's causeway
Now you tell me ...Did you relog before you looked? That makes all the mats disappear.
If only that worked on the paras and provos too!Did you relog before you looked? That makes all the mats disappear.
Just go full NK on the medals.How about the higher your military rank, the more strepsil tablets you wear on the chest?
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