Sunk Rock [Ferry] Introduced: 1870; Speed: 18.0mph Barletta [Paddle Steamer] Introduced: 1870; Speed: 23.0mph Harbour Point [Utility Vessel] Introduced: 1870; Speed: 19.0mph Harbour Point [Trawler] Introduced: 1870; Speed: 19.0mph Meteor [Freighter] Introduced: 1870; Speed: 18.0mph Little Cumbrae [Freighter] Introduced: 1870; Speed: 18.0mph Whitgift [Freight Barge] Introduced: 1870; Speed: 16.0mph Saint Marie [Barge Tug] Introduced: 1870; Speed: 16.0mph Fish Island [Trawler] Introduced: 1880; Speed: 17.0mph Castle Point [Steamer] Introduced: 1900; Speed: 25.0mph Altamira [Freighter] Introduced: 1900; Speed: 18.0mph Pine Island [Log Tug] Introduced: 1900; Speed: 13.0mph Grizenesse [Freighter] Introduced: 1905; Speed: 20.0mph Frisco Bay [Freighter] Introduced: 1915; Speed: 18.0mph Fastnet [Paddle Steamer] Introduced: 1918; Speed: 23.0mph Eddystone [Tanker] Introduced: 1920; Speed: 20.0mph Geneva [Freight Barge] Introduced: 1920; Speed: 16.0mph Hopetown [Tanker] Introduced: 1926; Speed: 20.0mph Cape Spear [Trawler] Introduced: 1948; Speed: 20.0mph Grindavik [Reefer] Introduced: 1950; Speed: 23.0mph Patos Island [Ferry] Introduced: 1953; Speed: 22.0mph Santorini [Freighter] Introduced: 1953; Speed: 20.0mph Marstein [Freighter] Introduced: 1954; Speed: 21.0mph Capo Sandalo [Ferry] Introduced: 1959; Speed: 23.0mph Shark Island [Livestock Ship] Introduced: 1960; Speed: 26.0mph Constance [Freight Barge] Introduced: 1961; Speed: 18.0mph Feodosiya [Hydrofoil] Introduced: 1967; Speed: 40.0mph Cadiz [Freighter] Introduced: 1970; Speed: 20.0mph Thunder Bay [Hovercraft] Introduced: 1972; Speed: 46.0mph Yokohama [Tanker] Introduced: 1973; Speed: 22.0mph Finisterre [Freighter] Introduced: 1974; Speed: 22.0mph Matsushima [Hydrofoil] Introduced: 1978; Speed: 56.0mph Nieuwpoort [Container Feeder] Introduced: 1979; Speed: 30.0mph Maspalomas [Freighter] Introduced: 1985; Speed: 20.0mph Dieze [Container Barge] Introduced: 1990; Speed: 25.0mph Enoshima [Fast Ferry] Introduced: 1997; Speed: 50.0mph Endeavour [Rig Supply Fast Catamaran] Introduced: 1998; Speed: 45.0mph Mount Blaze [Fast Ferry] Introduced: 2008; Speed: 60.0mph redFISH readme ----------------------------------- Contents: 1 About 2 Usage and Parameters 3 Building from source 3.1 Speed issues 3.2 Obtaining the source 4 Credits 5 License ------- 1 About ------- This is a fork from andythenorth's FISH NewGRF. It was created to adjust ship capacities in order to allow ships to seriously compete with other modes of transportation. Cargo capacities of most freighters are quadrupled and have their running costs and buy costs adjusted accordingly. Changed ships (cargo capacity); Whitgift Freight Barge Saint Marie Barge Tug Geneva Freight Barge Pine Island Log Tug Meteor Freighter Little Cumbrea Freighter Shark Island Livestock Ship Marstein Freighter Altamira Freighter Eddystone Tanker Dieze Container Barge Cadiz Freighter Constance Freight Barge Nieuwpoort Freighter Hopetown Tanker Frisco Bay Freighter Grindavik Reefer Santorini Freighter Maspalomos Freighter Yokohama Tanker Added ships; Finisterre Freighter Grizenesse Freighter Harbour Point Trawler Name of this Repo: redFISH Repository version: {{REPO_REVISION}} ---------------------- 2 Usage and Parameters ---------------------- This set replaces the default ships with a new set. Unchanged from the original FISH, this NewGRF has three parameters. The first, if enabled, reduces the construction costs of canals, locks and aquaducts in order to provide more balanced between the different modes of transportation. The second allows a choice of ship's speed adjustments, ranging from slowing down ships, leaving them unchanged or increasing their speed. The last parameter allows restrictions on ship availability, where one can enabled all ships, only sea based ships or only river based ships. ---------------------- 3 Building from source ---------------------- Usually there's not much which needs to be changed when you obtain the source. Your friends will usually be make make install Both will build the grf from source, the latter will also try to copy the grf into your grf folder so that it is available for testing and use straight away. A brief overview over all Makefile targets is given here: all: This is the default target, if also no parameter is given to make. It will simply build the grf file, if it needs building depend: Re-run the dependency check. Usually not manually needed. docs: Build the documentation files bundle: This target will create a directory called "-nightly" and copy the grf file there and the documentation files, readme.txt, changelog.txt and license.txt bundle_zip This will zip the bundle directory into one zip for distribution bundle_tar This will tar the bundle directory into a tar archive for distribution or upload to bananas bundle_src Creates a source bundle install: This will create a tar archive (like bundle_tar) and copy it into the INSTALLDIR as specified in Makefile.local (or the default dir, if that isn't defined). Don't rely on a good detection of the default installation directory. It's especially bound to fail on windows machines. distclean: This phony target cleans everything from a source bundle which wasn't shipped. clean: This phony target will delete all files which this Makefile will create mrproper: This phony target will delete also all directories created by different Makefile targets remake: It's a shortcut for first cleaning the dir and then making the grf anew. addcheck: Check whether there are some files required but not part of the repository. check: Check the md5sum of the built newgrf against the supplied md5sum (Intended to be used when building from tar balls) 3.1 Speed issues ---------------- A note concerning the speed of the makefile: It seems that the required tools using MinGW and / or msys are thoroughly slow on windows. A few example run times for OpenGFX, same processor type (both core 2 duo, 2.26GHz for the windows machine, 2.0 GHz for the OSX machine). Note that the values given are the 'real' time. Even though this varies more and is dependent on the processor load, that's what you have to wait for; the 'user' times are quite low on the windows machine (~16s), but that by no means reflects the build time. Times are from OpenGFX r539 with makefile r199. DEP_CHECK_TYPE windows bash native native in VM (OSX) none 1m23.360s - 0m32.781s mdep 1m54.484s 0m30.164s 0m33.807s normal 2m37.857s - 0m36.528s 3.2 Obtaining the source ------------------------ The source code can be obtained from the #openttdcoop DevZone at http://dev.openttdcoop.org/projects/redfish or via mercurial checkout hg clone http://hg.openttdcoop.org/redfish --------- 4 Credits --------- andythenorth et al. -------------- 5 License -------------- GNU GPL v2