Sunday, August 25, 2013

Follow the Sultry Sounds.

Being part of Geekdome, in a addition to trains, i'm also a big fan of Sci-Fi, especially the Star Wars movies. But if you ask me who my favorite character from those movies would be, you would get an odd answer: Ben Burtt. Though he never appears on the screen in the movies, Burtt is just as important as any of the visible actors. He's the sound design guy, the one who makes all of those odd and unusual noises that populate the Star Wars universe. For example, Burtt came up with Darth Vader's labored breathing (a microphone inside of a scuba regulator), R2D2's beeps and whistles (baby gurgling and Ben's own voice played at super speed), and the engine noise of the hero's spaceship, the Millenium Falcon (a soon-to-be broken down air-conditioning unit).

I've always been more enthralled with the sound fx in the movies and the behind-the-scenes work of the music industry than I have been with the finished products. So for me, trying to come up with the various sounds that a locomotive makes is just as much fun - and just as much work - as the other aspects of putting a locomotive into a simulator or game. For the GP40, there are still enough of them and their six axle brothers around to be able to get most of the sounds we need. However, just like I found with the locomotive shape, there is no such thing as "generic" GP40 sound. A rebuilt CSX 645 prime mover doesn't sound the same as an NS 645. The NS unit actually idles lower and Notch 1 sounds like Idle on the CSX unit. Another thing that is quite noticeable is the difference in sound between coupling to a loaded car and coupling to an empty car.

So, after many hours of pointing an HD video camera at various GP and SD40-2's, and more hours spent behind a computer desk cutting, pasting, and mixing sounds, we've come up with a few that may be acceptable for our locomotive. Here is the first test after a recent complete sound file replacement.




Pretty neat, huh? In the next few weeks we will be adding other sounds such as bells, dynamic brakes, brake squeals, cab noise, and of course, the horn. 

Check back with us here, and on our YouTube channel (www.youtube.com/user/VirtualRailCreations) for more updates and we move the project into the final stages of the build, and then on to testing.





Monday, August 19, 2013

Did Someone Call A Cab?

     More pics from progress on our locomotive. We've added new cab furnishings and additional accoutrements to customize the cab for each particular locomotive paint scheme. The cab view can also be dated according to the optional equipment it carries. This one is the most modern cab, built for the CSX YN3 scheme. Note the Wabtec Trainline HOT box, which is the most current in the company catalog, as well as the modern speedo and the Auto-Start warning sticker on the back wall.

     The windows haven't been given their transparency yet - that will come when the cab is "mated" to the body. Yes, it is a real hook-up process, akin to what happens at the prototype factory!







Wednesday, August 7, 2013

New Video

We finally got the GP40 model exteriors done - well, not quite done. As George Lucas once quoted someone else who was talking about movies, works of art are never finished, only abandoned. But we have enough functionality in the models now to put together a demo video of what we have been working on. Take a gander at it over on the CSX page!