Forums
 

Is my graphics chip dying


Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 16-05-2012, 08:34   #1
megannibbles
Forum Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: wisbech cambs
Services: sky+, BT broadband & phone, freeview.
Posts: 39
Is my graphics chip dying

Hi everyone.
I have been having an on going problem with my desktop with the occasional blue screen. It seems to occur when there is a demanding screen via video or website.
I sent the desktop and monitor to the pc doctor and unfortunately the old monitor died whilst there so he was certain that was the cause. I have purchased a new monitor and now I occasionally get the picture distorted as if I was watching anologue tv in a foggy thunderstorm!!
I have got a full page snip but I am not sure how to post that on here. It shows the page all distorted except for the screwfix advert!!
Any ideas anyone?
My pc is 18 months old with a NVIDIA Geforce7025/nforce630a. Running windows 7 64bit service pack 1, DirectX version 11.0
megannibbles is offline   Reply With Quote
Please sign in or register to remove this advertisement.
Old 16-05-2012, 08:50   #2
c4rv
Forum Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Essex
Services: too many
Posts: 13,522
Its VERY unlikely that a monitor can cause a blue screen.

Mostly like is a duff driver or application. I could suggestion doing a disk imagine & back up then doing a clean install.

You can't upload images to this site, you will need to upload to flickr or some image hosting site and post a link.
c4rv is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 16-05-2012, 09:11   #3
megannibbles
Forum Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: wisbech cambs
Services: sky+, BT broadband & phone, freeview.
Posts: 39
Is my graphics chip dying?

Hi
Thanks for the quick reply, sounds like I know what I will be doing this weekend then!!
megannibbles is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 16-05-2012, 11:31   #4
curiousclive
Forum Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Slough, UK
Posts: 301
Could try going to Nvidia site and seeing if there is an updated driver for your card. If it is a corrupted driver for the graphic card then should repair it without having to do clean install of windows
curiousclive is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 16-05-2012, 11:42   #5
mpmc17
Forum Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Nr. Nuneaton, Warwickshire
Services: Unavailable
Posts: 2,212
To bad it's onboard as you could have baked it!
mpmc17 is offline Follow this poster on Twitter   Reply With Quote
Old 16-05-2012, 11:53   #6
Si_Crewe
Forum Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Dumfries
Posts: 25,675
If you ARE suffering problems with your gfx card it's possible that it could be due to issues with cooling.
It could be the gfx processor or the memory but you can't do anything about that but it could be overheating and you can do something about that by removing any fans and shrouds and giving them a good clean with a brush and replacing any thermal paste with new stuff.

having said that, watching videos or surfing the web isn't really a particularly gfx intensive process so I'd be surprised if that was causing a gfx card to throw a wobbly.

You could try downloading something like THIS and if there's a problem with your gfx card it should reveal it.
Course, there's a chance that stress-testing your gfx card could kill it completely.
Si_Crewe is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 16-05-2012, 12:53   #7
dodgygeeza
Forum Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Manchester
Services: Virgin TiVo, phone and 60Mbps BB. WinXP
Posts: 6,151
Quote:
Originally Posted by mpmc17 View Post
To bad it's onboard as you could have baked it!
Well that's a new one on me, how on earth does this work?

[edit] Never mind, done some background reading. I've never considered the oven as a soldering tool before haha
dodgygeeza is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 16-05-2012, 16:39   #8
Alan F
Forum Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 803
Quote:
Originally Posted by dodgygeeza View Post
I've never considered the oven as a soldering tool before haha
You can achieve exactly the same effect with a hand held paint stripping gun.

I have attempted this recently on 2 laptop motherboards, both dead, and achieved a 50% sucess rate.
Alan F is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply



Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

 
Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 15:02.