FsTipster,
I usually don't post in this forum leaving it to experts like yourself but this time I really feel that you have not only missed the mark but you have also misinformed people and you could cause, inadvertently, many problems
You couldn't be more wrong about your observations regarding the aircraft folder and your not wrong from an Fs standpoint your WRONG from a system standpoint.
It doesn't matter which application we would be discussing. Any app needs to be kept as free as possilble to allow the system to use less resources. So to use an example outside of the sim we could take any operating system and not clean out the temp files and this could cause a system breakdown. In fact a little research into this simple fact might be very instructive for you.
Fs2k2 puts limits on the size of the aircraft folder and the scenery library for this very reason. In fact all applications have built-in system limits.
Overloaded aircraft or scenery folders and incorrectly arranged scenery library can have dramatic effect on the interoperation of your sim and operating system.
That is why developers have made programs for gauge removal and aircraft organization and their work is not just to have some thing to do.
Aircraft Organizer is an outstanding utility which will not get into your registry and gum it all up. Get it here: http://www.cfswarbirds.com/Utilities/utilities.html
ramsa329@msn.com
Microsoft Systems Engineer
I'm not a Microsoft Systems Engineer, and frankly, if that's the quality of the advice you give out, I never want to be one.
You couldn't be more wrong about your observations regarding the aircraft folder and your not wrong from an Fs standpoint your WRONG from a system standpoint.
Right....so FS2002 does load all the aircraft when it initiates then does it? It collects more data than the UI info as well does it?
Kindly point me to the source of your information.
Fs2k2 puts limits on the size of the aircraft folder and the scenery library for this very reason.
Quote me the limit on the size of the aircraft folder and the scenery library.
The scenery.cfg file has a limit of 333 entries that it will address. That is not, by any means, the limit of the scenery library. There are ways to circumvent the scenery.cfg limit which are widely used without any form of system crash, system problem, or otherwise any resorded detrimental effect that I've ever seen anyone mention. However, as I said, the scenery.cfg file is not the scenery folder or the scenery library and has no connection with the size of the files contained with it.
Again, pleae quote the limit for the scenery library.
So to use an example outside of the sim we could take any operating system and not clean out the temp files and this could cause a system breakdown.
The temp folder is not the same as an aircraft folder. The nature of the files it could contain are far more likely to pose a threat to system stability than an aircraft folder in FS2002. To compare the two is woefully misleading. It's rather like saying that failing to empty your your child's toy box poses the same risks as failing to empty the ammo clip of a gun.
The only way that failing to clear out an aircraft folder would cause a system breakdown is if the size of the files contained within it eventually caused the hard drive to fill up to the point where it had insufficient capacity to work properly. That's true of any folder. Your suggestion as quoted on the thread to which I replied, was to move the aircraft to a different folder. This makes no difference whatsoever to the number of files, their size, or the number of registry entries.
It doesn't matter which application we would be discussing.
Of course it matters. That's the whole point. Different applications use files and folders in different ways. The point being addressed here is how FS2002 addresses the aircraft folder.
Overloaded aircraft or scenery folders and incorrectly arranged scenery library can have dramatic effect on the interoperation of your sim and operating system.
I'll wait for you to quote the limit of the aircraft folder so that I can exceed it and watch my system crash before commenting on that one any further...
I don't recall making any reference to the scenery library at all, and certainly not anything that would cause it to be incorrectly arranged. Completely irrelevant to the topic being discussed.