Troubleshooting London Museum Of Water & Steam: How to Fix Common Problems and Isuses
Common fixes:
- Clear the Cache of Your PC or Console
- Update London Museum Of Water & Steam game Licenses (PS Only).
- Power cycling your console (PlayStation 4 & Xbox One): Turn off your console » unplug power-cable for 1min. » Plug power-cable back » restart console » Run London Museum Of Water & Steam again.
- Install Missing Multiplayer packages.
How to Fix London Museum Of Water & Steam Game Server Connection Problems:
- Reset Winsock:
- Press » Search bar » and type CMD. Now, Right-click Command Prompt when it comes up as a result and select Run as administrator.
In Command Prompt, type 'netsh winsock reset' and hit Enter (on your keyboard).
Now, Restart your computer and Launch London Museum Of Water & Steam and check if the issue persists.
- Close all other Internet connected apps.
- Restart your network (modem or wi-fi).
Contact ThinQ Digital Media Limited Customer Service
If the problem still persists, contact ThinQ Digital Media Limited customer support. Here is how:
- Open email client
- Provide all neccessary details about the issues you're experiencing.
- Send your email to [email protected]
ABOUT THE GAME
This application is a virtual tour of the London Museum of Water & Steam museum.
The London Museum of Water & Steam is an independent museum founded in 1975 as the Kew Bridge Steam Museum.
Situated on the site of the old Kew Bridge Pumping Station in Brentford, near Kew Bridge on the River Thames in West London, England, the museum is centred on a collection of stationary water pumping steam engines dating from 1820 to 1910. It is the home of the world’s largest collection of working Cornish engines, including the Grand Junction 90 inch, the largest such engine in the world. The site is an anchor point on the European Route of Industrial Heritage.
The application allows you to explore the museum and the functioning steam machines.
Kew Bridge Pumping Station was originally opened in 1838 by the Grand Junction Waterworks Company, following a decision to close an earlier pumping station at Chelsea due to poor water quality. In the years up to 1944 the site expanded, ultimately housing six steam pumping engines as well as four Allen diesel pumps and four electric pump sets. The steam engines were retired from service in 1944, although two were kept on standby until 1958, when a demonstration run of the Harvey & Co. 100 inch engine marked the final time steam power would pump drinking water at the site.
The Metropolitan Water Board decided not to scrap the resident steam pumping engines and set them aside to form the basis of a museum display at a later date. This action bore fruit in 1974 with the formation of the Kew Bridge Engines Trust, a registered charity, by a group of volunteers previously involved in the restoration of the Crofton Pumping Station.
Today the site is an internationally recognised museum of working steam pumping engines, a reminder of the many pumping stations spread throughout London and the UK. In 1999, the United Kingdom government Department for Culture, Media and Sport described Kew Bridge as "the most import...