Cape Blanco Airport (ICAO:N5S6) Located in the Denmark, the airport is sparsely populated with beautiful scenery.
The airport has ONE runways, 1500 meters long.
Cape Blanco situated at N 42˚50'08.12", W 124˚33'51.16"—is the farthest western point on the mainland of Oregon. It is also the second-most westerly point of the contiguous United States (Cape Alava, Washington, exceeds Cape Blanco by some nine minutes of longitude).
Located about five miles north of Port Orford and three miles west of Highway 101, Cape Blanco may have been the "white cape" sighted and named by Spanish navigator Martin de Aguilar in 1603. After de Aguilar, the Oregon Coast remained essentially terra incognita to non-natives for another century and a half, when Spanish maritime explorer Juan Francisco Bodega christened the point Cabo Diligensias in 1775.
British naval Capt. George Vancouver dubbed it Cape Orford while coasting the vicinity in 1792. Although his toponym did not endure, it eventually came to be applied to the small harbor to the south. By the early nineteenth century, the name Cape Blanco was commonly shown on maps.
Features:
High resolution building textures
Accurat AFCAD file
Excellent night lighting
3D people
Optimized for excellent performance
Small occupancy space
Perfectly fit the surrounding ground
Manual Autogen
Delicate trees
Special tone of surrounding sea area
Speicial hangar
Requirements
Lockheed Martin Prepar3D V4, Lockheed Martin Prepar3D V5
Operating System: Microsoft Windows 7, 10
CPU: Quad Core CPU with 2.7 GHz
Memory: 4 GB DDR3 RAM
Graphics card: 1 GB VRAM, DirectX 11
Free disk space: 947 MB
The buildings textures are "ok" but the taxiway/runway textures are very low resolution, too bad. Even buying it during a sale it doesn't worth the money.
Very dissapointed.