April 22, 201610 yr It's not running out of memory. I checked that. Usually I can get in the air and within 5 minutes, it CTDs. Is there some kind of log file I can look at that would provide hints?
April 22, 201610 yr Yes, its called log.txt and its in your X-plane route directory. It will have info and what is happening. You can post it here and some of us can look and see whats going on. Rob
April 22, 201610 yr Go read the log.txt it will tell you whats crashing Pete Richards I've owned every version of flight simulator since Flight Simulator 3.0 in 1988. Windows 11 Pro loaded on a 4TB Gen5 Crucial T700 SSD, 4TB Samsung 990 Pro SSD, Ryzen 9 7950x3d, AS Rock X670e Taichi Motherboard, Gigabyte Gaming RTX 4090 OC 24GB, 64GB (2x32GB) Viper Venom DDR5-6000MT/s, MSI 32" MAG 321UPX QD-OLED 260hz 4K Gaming Monitor.
April 22, 201610 yr One way is to keep track of everything you have installed as an add-on since the last time it worked. Uninstall all of that and then install them back, one at a time, until it crashes. Then you know. i7-4790K o/c @ 4.8 GHz, Corsair H-110 liquid cooler, 32 GB Corsair Vengeance RAM, MSI Maximus VII Hero mobo Samsung Pro 512 GB SSD Corsair GFX Hydro GTX-1080 8 GB, (2) 4TB hybrid HDs Win 10 (1607), X-Plane 10.51r2 and X-Plane 11.01b1
April 22, 201610 yr Author Well, that was easy. At the bottom of the log it says the program crashed because of the SASL plugin (and there's a bunch of errors with SASL loading avionics prior to that).Now, what that means, I'll let you guys tell me. I didn't remember installing an SASL plugin. Or is maybe a plane trying to find that plugin and I just need to install it? I'll try that first, as I've found a download link for it.
April 22, 201610 yr Not only Carenados. Most planes can't do anything without their Plug-ins anymore and most of these plug-ins use SASL. Often the computers lack one of the necessary redestributables of the used compiler: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/2977003 Karsten Schubert
Create an account or sign in to comment