Cargo Ship engines rotated 90 degrees

  1. Description of the problem, what happened.

     Engines on a cargo ship in Operation Monolith PvE are rotated upwards by 90 degrees, giving a rather humerus appearance.

  1. What did you expected to happen.

     I expected the engines to be positioned normally like on every other cargo ship.

  1. The conditions during the situation.

     Rank 15 Operation ‘Monolith’ PvE general match

  1. Further details on the issue.

     N/A

  1. Frequency of occurrence.

     100%

  1. Logs + [screenshots](< base_url >/index.php?/topic/18799-how-to-takepost-screenshots/) or a video (Including a description of the issue, where to and how to reproduce it)  Screenshot needs to be done with ingame tools! Don’t change screenshot’s original name!

     20180618101121_1.jpg.e281de1c0c19b751a765fa7bfbdaeea6.jpg20180618101126_1.jpg.89ff23630e6084d0c87f24bf31e61ed0.jpg

  1. If possible, the time when it happend. In this case we will be able to look more closely to the server logs. Also mention your time zone.

     idk lol

  1. Information on the configuration of your computer (DxDiag)

     RX480 graphics with all the latest drivers and Dx12. Win10.0

 

That looks ridiculous.

Just tested on laptop with same results. So it’s not my PC.

Also fun fact most ship engines capacitors and cockpits are separate models and all rendered separately. This helps reduce file sizes but lets weird stuff like this happen. Some ship models are even split in to several parts to make quick edits easier.

Back when destroyers were first introduced, their engines and capacitors weren’t anchored to the models correctly so they wobbled around when struck or when maneuvering.

7 hours ago, TheDarkRedFox said:

Also fun fact most ship engines capacitors and cockpits are separate models and all rendered separately. This helps reduce file sizes but lets weird stuff like this happen. Some ship models are even split in to several parts to make quick edits easier.

Back when destroyers were first introduced, their engines and capacitors weren’t anchored to the models correctly so they wobbled around when struck or when maneuvering.

A thousand years into the future. Technology has reached higher boundaries than we ever imagined.

 

And yet we strap on our ship’s engines with rubber bands and cable ties.

1 hour ago, Scar6 said:

A thousand years into the future. Technology has reached higher boundaries than we ever imagined.

 

And yet we strap on our ship’s engines with rubber bands and cable ties.

Duct tape solves ALL your problems!

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