September 16, 201114 yr What motherboard does he have? I may have read over it. If its a Gigabyte board I think it is in Integrated Peripherals and then the third setting from the top. Both optimists and pessimists contribute to our society. The optimist invents the airplane and the pessimist the parachute. ~Gil Stern
September 17, 201114 yr If i were you, I'ld start backing up everything important on your O.S. disk, now.If you own Acronis use that. Once you start getting these sort of errors, even a backup by "Acronis" wouldcontain errors.I've been there before and, you may have a simple configuration error but, once it starts to BSOD, restarting,etc, errors start building up. Start backing up now or, you may wind up being frustrated.Then trouble shoot 'cause, it just might stop booting up.Use an external USB HD: they are cheap. Alex Cadle
September 17, 201114 yr Author Just to be sure. Is it the battery or the clear cmos metode i should use? Ist a Asrock motherboard. eSimmer i doesn't have anything special besides FSX on the computer. Patrick - Denmark i7 10900k - GTX1060 (To be upgraded to RTX3080-ti) - 32 GB of RAM - Nvme SSD - 100 mbps internet
September 17, 201114 yr Just to be sure. Is it the battery or the clear cmos metode i should use? Ist a Asrock motherboard. eSimmer i doesn't have anything special besides FSX on the computer. CMOS battery should be removed like this: 1) It should look like this 2) Press the side pin to release it 3) Take it out with your hand and then put it again It just defaults all the settings of your PC and doesn't delete any files from the HDD, if you want to ensure this, you can disconnect HDD and SSD from the motherboard. Doing this solves most of these kinds of errors like you said I/O error which happens because of messed up computer configuration.http://forum.avsim.net/topic/348325-just-when-everything-seemed-ok/ the same step helped this guy also
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