Red light ati x1950 pro
-
How long has it been since you cleaned the heat sink of the graphics card?
-
hello and welcome
at first glance it seems like it's the graphics, because you have it almost burned with so much temp
regards
-
to start you can try to disassemble the heatsink and change the thermal paste on the GPU. have you ever done it?
nothing lasts forever, and thermal paste even less 
-
+1 to the gentlemen incrediboy, ferelxyx and CNCBCN.
1º Dismantle the heat sink and fan of the graphics card
2º Clean them well of dust and what is left of the thermal paste
3º Buy new thermal paste, put it on and put it all together again
4º Test the equipment with the graphics card to determine if the temperature remains high or if the problem has been solved.If after this process the problem persists, the graphics card would be ruled out and we would enter to evaluate failures in the motherboard or other components, but first it is important that you try this.
Regards
-
When it started to fail, the first thing I did was clean it, but it wasn't a thorough cleaning, so I'll try what comentais.De says anyway, that explains the high temperatures it reaches when playing something demanding. But the boot problem, could it also be due to temperature? Because in principle the graphics card at startup shouldn't have much temperature, so it should work without problems, right? Besides, why does it sometimes boot and sometimes not?
PD: measuring the temperature with aida64, right now it shows me 45º in gpu ambient. The gpu field shows me only 9º, which I suspect is wrong, and the vrm temperature value appears sometimes yes and sometimes no. At this moment nothing.
-
This intermittence of effectiveness seems to indicate that the graph has already been affected by those peaks of temperature that it has reached on some occasions. We are probably talking about irreparable damage. :nono:
-
Feel lucky to have had that graphics card so far, it's been profitable. Check out this post on a last resort to bring a graphics card back to life How to repair a graphics card using an oven and start thinking about a replacement.
-
xDDDD
What a great idea with the oven, I had no idea.De anyway, I think I won't try such extreme methods. I'll see if a thorough cleaning helps, but I say that the fact that it starts sometimes and sometimes not even when cold, no matter how much the temperatures improve, is not solved. Right now, after playing Modern Warfare 2 for a while, my GPU VRMs temperature has gone up to 117°C and I had already left the game O_O
-
xDDDD
What a great point about the oven, I had no idea.De anyway, I think I won't try such extreme methods. I'll see if a thorough cleaning helps, but I say that the fact that it starts sometimes and sometimes not even when cold doesn't get solved even if temperatures improve a lot. Right now, after playing modern warfare 2 for a while, my gpu vrm temperature has gone up to 117º and that's after I had already left the game O_O
So, it doesn't cool well and it's most likely damaged irreversibly.
I would rehabilitate it as I explained before and if it doesn't get solved, oven to the rescue, because you can't make a silk purse out of a sow's ear.Regards
-
1º try to disassemble it completely, change the thermal paste and check the "pads" of the memories, if it still works badly with that :nono: it's time to resort to toasted bread with ATI (without garlic and without tomato
and if that doesn't solve the problem either, it's time to dig deep into your pocket :mudo:
Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.
Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.
With your input, this post could be even better 💗
Registrarse Conectarse