FSX Thomas Ruth L1011 Pacific Southwest Airlines livery, Registration N1079 Repaint made by: PedroRNunes96 Textures only, requires base model (TOML1011.ZIP)! Special thanks for Thomas Ruth and Erick Cantu for providing this amazing and beautiful aircraft, among others! INSTALLATION: - Unzip the folder to a temporary location, like your desktop; - Copy the texture folder containing the texture files to your SimObjects/Airplanes/Tom_L1011-100 folder; - Copy the fltsim.XX text into the aircraft.cfg (replace the 'xx' for the correct number); - Fly the aircraft! For any questions, please contact me: Pedro Nunes pedrornunes96@hotmail.com NOTICE: I don't do repaint requests. ***COPY THIS INTO YOUR AIRCRAFT.CFG*** [fltsim.xx] title=L1011-100 PSA sim=tom1011 model= panel= sound= texture=PSA kb_checklists=Boeing747-400_check kb_reference=Boeing747-400_ref atc_id=N1079 atc_airline=PSA atc_flight_number=1123 atc_heavy=1 ui_manufacturer=Lockheed ui_type=L1011-100 ui_variation=PSA ui_typerole=Commercial Airliner ui_createdby=Thomas Ruth + Eric Cantu description="Back in the 60's, there was a need for a widebody airliner that was smaller to the 747 but capable of landing and departing airports with short runways. Lockheed had been largely absent from the civil airliner market since the late 50's following technical problems with the L-188 Electra. Having experienced difficulties with some of their military programs, Lockheed was eager to re-enter the civil market, and their response was the TriStar. The aircraft was originally conceived as a "jumbo twin", but a three-engine design was ultimately chosen to give the aircraft enough thrust to take off from existing runways. It's direct competitor in the market was the McDonnell Douglas DC-10. Eventually, Lockheed suffered the loss of airlines' interest due to delays in Rolls Royce engines deliveries, and McDonnell Douglas won the biggest share of the market. In 1983, after reaching the 250th mark of L1011's built, Lockheed stopped production and withdrawed from the market for good."