Wierd noise coming from GPU in irrlicht shader example

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eye776
Posts: 94
Joined: Sun Dec 28, 2008 11:07 pm

Post by eye776 »

I have a cheap-ass motherboard, so the "spread spectrum" option has only two "states" : enabled and disabled. :D

Anyway, the card started exhibiting a few other issues (a thin silhouette over fog covered polygons, polygon edge tearing, small strange artifacts on polygon edges when applying DOF) and since I just bought the card last week I figured "send it into warranty, let them worry about it". :P

Ah well, back to ye olde (integrated) 6100.

S**t, to be honest, I replaced EVERYTHING but my processor because of an electrical fault that fried my motherboard (Biostar K8M00-MicroAM2 (rev. 1.0)) - I discharged into the f*****g power button!!??.

I didn't want to risk using the old power supply or the old RAM, and figured that if I get a new motherboard (GA-M61PME-S2P (rev. 1.3)), might as well get a decent video card to do some shader programming (the old graphics card was an AGP 6200).

Crap, from now on, I'm saving money every time I can.

My next PC will be brand spankin new, either ground-up, no more re-used s**t, with an i5 or an i7 (the way I see it AMD doesn't have any competing tech for now), or a laptop.
hybrid
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Post by hybrid »

Watch the thermal design of your system. Many cases are not capable of handling huge gfx cards and their much heat. I've also burnt two or three cards already.
eye776
Posts: 94
Joined: Sun Dec 28, 2008 11:07 pm

Post by eye776 »

Thanks for the advice.

My current case is a uATX format one, (the GeForce 6200 I previously had was a low-profile AGP card); only the motherboard got fried (and afterwards I got shocked while touching the case).

The GT220 is not a huge card (40nm, it gets power from the PCIE slot), but I'm a bit afraid to put the new build in the same case so, for now, it's lying assembled on a wooden board (I DO need my PC working ;)).
m3ltd0wn
Posts: 107
Joined: Wed Dec 12, 2007 8:32 am
Location: Romania

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Post by m3ltd0wn »

from my experience biostar motherboards are proned to burn out, so is ecs :D
i hardly recommend gigabyte and intel for motherboards :)

i've seen some asus mobos with fried capacitors, msi is ok though.
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