Why is bridgeport so laggy




















I drove around the city, visited few clubs, went to several problematic places in terms of routing. No one got stuck along the way or failed by teleporting to an unknown destination. However, not everything is as good as I'd like Sims still get stuck, but not on the roads. Services like bartenders and security guards are generated in an apartment building.

And they are generated from the wrong side of the door! Do they will always be there to suffer, being bricked up? I was also a little discouraged by the number of visitors in one of the popular establishments. I guess that by default there should be a lot of sims there, but maybe there is some way to fix this?

This creates trouble, especially for the elevator. No one can get up or down, all they can do is yell and stamp feet. And finally, I would be happy if someone would tell me if there is any way to get from point A to point B directly. It's strange to take a taxi with transfers in the metro. The nature of a LN apartment building is that many perhaps not all of them will appear to live in highrises. In reality they are still homeless NPCs but they go into the Private Room markered portions of these buildings behind a specified NPC door to hibernate instead of off the map as they would in worlds that do not have these structures.

Yes, they may instantiate behind such a door as needed but they should then be able to waltz right out. Actively played sims can summon them by way of a call box in the lobby. The more typical problem reported with these units, and I've experienced it as well until I learned how to fix it, is that regular resident sims who live in the usable unit of these buildings will also sometimes instantiate behind the NPC door in the darkened out Private Room areas and then cannot get out.

They work much better higher up. That takes quite a bit of lot editing to get right though. I usually blast through the walls, turn such spaces into Public Room markered areas, and use them as laundry or rec rooms for the buildings' inhabitants.

I'm curious. Can you woohoo with your child? Build 14 Answers Can you who hoo with more then 1 sim? Build 6 Answers Is there a cheat for career leveling? Main Quest 5 Answers What is the Best paying job at level 10? Build 5 Answers How can i make cookies for the sims3? Side Quest 2 Answers.

Ask A Question. Browse More Questions. Keep me logged in on this device. Forgot your username or password? It was fine last time I played it, but now it's just terrible. Every 2 seconds or so, sims just stop moving for up to about 5 seconds at a time. Animated objects such as waterfalls still move and the plumbob still spins, but everything else freezes.

I've tried copying the save, to no avail. Anything I can do? Login to Your Account. Remember Me? Register Forgot password? What's New? Likes: 1 Post 1. Results 1 to 11 of Thread: Bridgeport Discovery Lag. Thread Tools Show Printable Version.

I'm new to this forum and to CNC Mechanics. I've been working in this industry for about 4 years now with starting as a CNC Mill Operator working my way up to Engineering and Programming.

And I've decided to start my own shop on the side, I got a very good deal for a Discovery fully functional from my current Employer as they were going to throw it away. The control is original as it came with the machine so I assume DX32 from reading different posts.

My question is: Is there anyway that I could upgrade something to get rid of this lag? Hi blackwolf I read your post with some appreciation of where you're coming from, and here's my two cents' worth. First, you need to define for yourself what you are hoping to achieve with your "shop on the side" If you intend to pick up stray work for beer money, you can get away with a completely different setup than if you hope to compete with every other job shop in town.

If the former, then there is no reason not to invest in making the Bridgeport as good as you can other than the cost of doing it, the recognition that after you're done it will not have gained in value other than to you , and the recognition that it will still be an obsolete dog that you can enjoy with pride and make cool things on but will forever be hampered by its limitations. If the latter, of course you are hobbling your business plan right from the beginning with someone else's cast off: after all there is a reason they wanted to be rid of it.

Moving on to the machine: The DX32 control was Bridgeport's foray into making a state of the art PC driven control in which the control workload were shared by a PC running DOS, and a special motion control card that did the work not suitable for the PC to control. From Bridgeport's perspective it was a fucking disaster! They marketed it as a top-of-the-line control and were promptly sued by a gazillion buyers who had bought machines and could never get them to perform properly.

As I understand it, the control was never able to handle acceleration and deceleration properly and would stutter like mad as soon as you tried to surface mill anything with a ballcutter at over 40 IPM, or do a 2D contour along a spline.

It may well be that you're seeing those limitations in action. So if you actually have a DX32 machine, you are hobbled with this limitation. Having said all that, I own a machine with a DX32 control; mine is a Defiance VTX 1, and although the control is all the POS it's cracked up to be, it's still a useful machine and has made me lots of money over the years.

I use mine for routing plastics; simple 2D contouring I have a couple of steady customers who get me to do that kind of work regularly and it's super nice to have a machine that never gets soiled with skanky coolant and Rapidtap and all that other delightful crap that lives in most VMC's.

Moving on to upgrading it; yes it's possible, many have done it, but when you're finished you will be the proud owner of a bastard orphan with almost zero resale value, because most serious machine buyers will not tolerate a machine they can't have easily fixed and they can't easily hire a guy to run.

So ask yourself if your complaint is truly a limitation for what you want to do with it. If it would be "nice " to have a smoother running machine but not essential, I would just run it until it dies and enjoy the benefit of having it.



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