Well if your laptop is using the Intel onboard graphics chip, your frame rates will be very low and sluggish even on computatialy-light routes like Cajon Pass. It is usually blatantly obvious the Intel onboard graphics are being used cuz the frame rates are so bad.
Usually the Nvidia control panel is set to autodect the use of a 3D-graphic application and sets it to use a dedicated GPU card by default. You can also manually set in there on an application by application basis as to which graphics chip to use. So if you want to force it to use the onboard intel graphics GPU with Train Simulator.... you can. You can also turn off autodetect and tell it to always use the GTX 1060 on a game. But autodect works like 95% of the time, so there is rarely a need to take it off autodetect the majority of the time.
Another way to prove if the GTX 1060 is being used is to use the utility program GPU-Z to monitor the card. Leave the program running in the background with the graphic card monitoring graphing tab open after you have chose the GTX 1060 in the main tab. Then run train simulator for a bit then quickly exit the program and look at the graphs. If they are showing lots of varying, modulated, thick red lines.... then the GTX 1060 was being used. If the graphs are just thin, red flatlined.... then the GTX 1060 got no use from the sim. You can also monitor the intel onboard graphics chip the same.... just select it instead of the 1060 on the main tab of GPU-Z.
Also the laptop will usually automatically change from the GTX 1060 over to the Intel onboard graphics if battery life hits 20% or lower.
Hope this helps you.
