Hi Bill,>I've tried the mod that Alan reminded me of (thanks
>Alan)...
>
>(SOUND) <-- Square brackets, of course
>Channels=1
>SamplesPerSec=22050
I'm glad you mentioned that - I was thinking only yesterday that I needed to try it myself.
I've not really got much in the way of useful advice, except perhaps that if you can disable the internal sound in BIOS, then you might be able to fit a higher performance sound card in the form of a PCMCIA card. There's a very good, professional one we sell at work, whose name completely escapes me for the moment. It's pricey, and may not be entirely appropriate - £500+ and balanced ins and outs on XLR connectors (Digigram VX Pocket). There's also the Echo Indigo at around the £ton - much more reasonable (www.echoaudio.com). As these are intended as professional recording systems, they won't come with joystick ports, you'd need to use USB, but then you used to be a keyboard flyer so even that may not be necessary .
This is the first time I've visited here since Christmas, I've been suffering major trauma - my FS drive decided to fail, eventually got a new drive installed, decided to upgrade the operating system (for "upgrade", read "downgrade"), and finally put the old FS back this weekend.
You may remember I was running FS98 on Win98, and before that on NT4. On Win98 I was getting excellent frame rates on this clockwork computer - around 23fps in 3D mode. On NT, although it was much slower because the card couldn't run in 3D mode, it was delightfully smooth.
Now, on Win2000 pro, I'm getting 4.1 fps in 3D mode with the scenery density at its minimum setting - it is totally unusable. Running the graphics card in 2D in a window gives about 18 fps at minimum scenery density, with a horrible looking display.
I decided to try the copy of FS2000 that I won at Brum a couple of years back, hoping beyond hope that it might be more suited to Windows 2k than FS98 is. It is, about 25% better than FS98 - the opposite of what happened under Windows98.
I've done a bit of investigation tonight, and found that it's having the instrument panel visible (in FS98) that is nobbling the performance. If I drag the panel down off the bottom of the screen, so that just the padding aroung the top shows, my frame rate shoots up from 3-4 to anything upto 33 fps.
In FS2000, dragging the panel off the screen makes absolutely no difference to the fps figures.
Either Windows 2000 Pro or the graphics card driver (the latest Windows certified nVidia ref. driver at guru3d a couple of weeks ago) does not like FS98.
These figures are after running Enditall 2 - don't like it - the first version was much more user friendly, and did exactly what it said on the tin. Being new to Win 2000, I may not have shut down all the services necessary to get a decent performance. More time-consuming experimentation with this is required, to see what can be shut down, and what is needed to keep the machine running.
Alan - still to retrieve the OLR from the duff drive