Arriaga 1934 Scenery for FS9

Location: N16* 16.81' W093* 58.01'
Elevation: 211 ft amsl 
ICAO: MMAR 
Runway: 15/33, 3750x300 ft, grass, some night lighting in cases of emergency.
Circuits: 15 RH, 33 LH.
Tower Frequency: 122.100.  
Parking: Grass, adjacent to road.
Navaids: MH class NDB on field, "ARR", frequency 372.0, range 37.5nm.
Landing Aids/Met data: windsocks at each end of runway.


This scenery is almost entirely fictional*, and is intended for use with the Bluegrass Virtual Airlines feature "Lineas Aereas Occidentales & the Lockheed Orion", by Allan Lowson, for August 2007. 

* The only real-life sources of geographical data used are the timetable quoted in the BGA feature, and the 1:14M scale map of Central America in "Collins World Atlas" (ISBN 0 00 448592 0), so the location is VERY approximate - I haven't even looked up Arriaga on GoogleEarth yet! As far as I know, there is no MMAR ICAO code, and no ARR ndb in Mexico.

How to get to/from Arriga:

FROM Oaxaca MMOX: 99 degrees @ 164.4nm. 
TO Oaxaca MMOX: 279 degrees @ 164.4nm.

TO Tapachula MMTP: 129 degrees @ 128.3nm.
FROM Tapachula MMTP: 309 degrees @ 128.3nm.


Installation (FS9):
(1) Unzip the Arriga_1934.zip file

(2) copy the 4 .bgl files (AF2_MMAR.bgl, MMAR_Arriaga_Exclude.bgl, MMAR_Windsock_1.bgl, MMAR_Windsock_2.bgl), into your "Flight Simulator 9\Addon Scenery\Scenery" folder.

(3) If you use FsNav, run "FSNavDBC" before starting FS9.

If you ever want to remove this scenery from your FS9 installation, delete the (AF2_MMAR.bgl, MMAR_Arriaga_Exclude.bgl, MMAR_Windsock_1.bgl, MMAR_Windsock_2.bgl) files from your "Flight Simulator 9\Addon Scenery\Scenery" folder, and rerun "FSNavDBC" if you use FSNav.  

Acknowledgements:
Allan Lowson and BGA for inspiring this add-on
Lee Swordy's "AFCAD2", used to create the AF2 file.
"Airport for Windows", used to creat the Exclude file.
David "Opa" Marshall, for his Tutorial on adding windsocks.

This scenery add-on is freeware, and must remain so. It contains, in my humble opinion, nothing liable to hurt anyone's PC, but is installed at the user's own risk.

Enjoy, JohnL.

     
