I pulled the card out but then realised that my monitor cable uses that card, and there is no other port I can attach the monitor cable to.
They all do, the rear of the gpu is where the cable is supposed to fit.
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I pulled the card out but then realised that my monitor cable uses that card, and there is no other port I can attach the monitor cable to.
Ultimate Trainz Collection. It's the version (I think) that came out before TRS04 did.UTC? What's that?
Odd.Are you able to take a nice quality image of your logic board? This way I can see what type of sockets you have.
Do you have a free download link?Ultimate Trainz Collection. It's the version (I think) that came out before TRS04 did.
A few things to try.
Run trainz as admin, also run in compatibility mode for windows xp sp2 or 3 (sp= service pack).
Don't know about the demos but the installed 2006 needs to be build 3337 or 3092 or it won't run.
Your computer as it is is plenty powerful enough for 2006. Recommended specs 1 gb ram, 2ghz single core cpu and a 128 mb cpu.
If you are getting blue screen errors, something is seriously wrong with your system.
Each blue screen error has an error code in capitals (example IRQ_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL) - is it the same each time?
Shane
Logic boards with built in cards have them on the I/O shield in the back of the computer.They all do, the rear of the gpu is where the cable is supposed to fit.
Send me a Private Message, I won't share my email with the recent amount of immature kids after me swarming about this board.I've taken photographs. Do you have an email address I can send you them to?
For the love of everything, don't do what he says. You're throwing money down the toilet.Ultimate Trainz Collection. It's the version (I think) that came out before TRS04 did.
"Logic boards with built in cards have them on the I/O shield in the back of the computer."
The x1600 is a graphics card pci-e or agp. There is also a mobility version for laptops.
Sonic said a wire was attached to it going to his monitor which makes it one of the former.
Not state of the art but good enough.
http://www.amd.com/us/products/desktop/graphics/other/pages/x1600-specifications.aspx
I'm quite aware of that, I was attempting to see if his board had integrated where he could just use a VGA cable to see if the graphics card was causing it. Like I said, Myself and many others I talk to have experienced BAD issues with ATI cards.
Whilst others such as myself have found them very reliable, we ran about 5,000 at one time.
Cheerio John
dxgkrnl.sys was the cause of the crash each time. Bug check code =0x00000116
Have you tried switching from Open/GL to DirectX in the Options? That can make a big difference too. ATI cards, especially older ones don't like Open/GL so much and run better with DirectX. The fact that you are getting BSODs concerns me. I suggest that you run some diagnostics on your computer. The drive could be failing, or your memory is bad. Also clean your PC of any dust and dirt as that can cause CPU overheating, etc., which leads to BSODs.
Regarding running... Don't bother with compatibility mode for XP. Instead use run as administrator. XP Compatibility mode does weird things, for a lack of computer terminology for that.
John
According to the details I've been reading, it's related to a timed out graphics driver reset/recovery - I would check that you are running the correct drivers.
If it keeps happening, this link may help: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2665946
Shane
I've seen that before too. Being an ATI card though, I'd ensure it's running DirectX and not Open/GL which Trainz defaults to. I've seen this error before with Open/GL settings.
You have to remember too that even though the BSOD is saying one thing, it could very well be something else including a corrupted driver or software causing this, so it's a good idea to run some diagnostics. I had a totally weird issue where I would install NT 4.0 Workstation all the way but the system wouldn't boot. I changed the hard drive for another one, also brand new, but that didn't help. The problem was the RAM.
John