OldProf wrote:For me, the Device Manager lists my ASUS VE247H monitor as "Generic Plug and Play Monitor" and uses a driver located in Sys32\BasicDisplay.sys. My NVIDIA video card, on the other hand, appears as "Standard Video Card" with the same driver location. Yesterday, I downloaded the proper NVIDIA driver for use with WIN10, but it did not install successfully. I used to know these tricks, but isn't there a way to safely delete a driver and force Windows to look for another one?

OldProf wrote:Thanks for the tips! I had begun to think (fear?) that WIN 10 would not allow users to install downloaded drivers, but I finally found the correct NVIDIA driver for my GT630 (no snickering, please), downloaded and installed it, and every blessed square centimeter of my monitor is now joyously filled. PHEW!


.. but since Railworks is so heavily CPU-based, my quad-cores are fine with dealing with it.
peterhayes wrote:SF.. but since Railworks is so heavily CPU-based, my quad-cores are fine with dealing with it.
Its actually more gpu intensive than cpu.
My figures over 4-5 years show an average cpu usage of around 31%, - RAM 24% and with a 1920 x 1200 monitor a VRAM usage up to 1.8GB and a total usage at peak of 85%. Now, Photoshop 64-bit with raw data is cpu intensive!![]()
pH

peterhayes wrote:That reference was from 2011 - it is quite different now especially since TS2012.
pH


peterhayes wrote:SF
If you choose low graphics settings for your card or internal gpu then the usage will be low.
I use all settings in TS2015 ALL set full right and SSAA 3 x 3 and that takes a lot of gpu (and cpu) power to render that to a 27" Monitor.
There are a lot of myths about TS in all its variations but it does need a balanced PC to work effectively.
You are lucky to get it working on an internal gpu as it needs a minimum bandwidth on any gpu of at least 60Gb/sec to run reasonably well.
If your motherboard supports it you should look at using LucidLogix as that combines the power of the internal card with a discrete gpu too.
Plus large monitor(s) and 4K monitors need huge gpu resources bandwidth and VRAM to run a simulator like TS.
pH



Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 4 guests