August 25, 20205 yr 2440 resolution. I7 7770k at 4.9 HT ON, 1080TI, 16 GIGS DDR4, Installed on an SSD, Caches are turned off for now. I installed the Windows 2004 update and did the hardware acceleration tip found here: Then I turned off the VFR cam option in the UI while youre in the cockpit. The menu is all the way on the right, looks like a cog. Those two things set me straight. Hope this helps folks.
August 25, 20205 yr Author Its absolutely the VFR cam thats screwing everything up. Like a lot of people, my favorite plane right now is the TBM. If you turn off the VFR cam, you are good. But the TBM has a big ol VFR cam in the middle display! If you monkey with the ranges, you get trouble again. Its really weird but absolutely repeatable. Its totally one of the big problems. *** It really does seem like as soon as you mess with the ranges on the VFR cam, you're back to square one. *** Edited August 25, 20205 yr by JughedJones
August 25, 20205 yr What's the VFR cam? Are you talking about the VFR map? Richard - flying out of Australia Explore amazing places with FLIGHT SIM DISCOVERYCheck out my real life 'learn to fly' video series
August 25, 20205 yr 21 minutes ago, JughedJones said: I'm so sorry. Yes. The VFR map in the UI options. Switching it on or off or removing it from the menu doesn't do anything to my fps at all.
August 25, 20205 yr Author The VFR map tip really seems to especially help when you're flying a longish flight plan and at altitude. The trick with it is to turn it off and leave it off. If you press V and turn it back on again, all the gains are lost in my experience. And if your flying a plane like the TBM with G3000, which has a big ol VFR map in the center, dont touch the range, or you lose all the gains Of course, your milage may very. On my system, I did the two things I mentioned, and I dont get the FPS spikes I was getting and im hovering around 35-45 FPS in urban areas. I feel good about it!
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