cpulloverclock : je parie que ta carte n'est pas une hercules !
une leadtek
piper
cpulloverclock : je parie que ta carte n'est pas une hercules !
piper
Pour la changer, si tu as le matos pour le faire non soucis, mais c'est trés difficile de déssouder les boitiers plcc soudés direct sur ci. Mais surtout, il faut trouver une eeprom compatible (www.radiospares.fr).
Mais avant de faire tout ça, il faut essayer de la reflasher, mais faut voir si on peut le faire
cpulloverclock
walkman a écrit a écrit :
vgabios teste un bios mais ne flashe pas l'eeprom avec
bizarre
enfin moi jai pousse max ma gf2 ti a 276MHz donc 552MHz DDR
4ns aussi
[edtdd]--Message édité par cpulloverclock--[/edtdd]
walkman
J'avais lu ça.
Le problème est que mon EEPROM n'est pas supportée par nvflash
avec ou sans carte PCI additionnelle.
Alors puis-je changer mon EEPROM ou la reprogrammer?
piper
tiré de www.geforcefaq.com :
"Q. My card's Video BIOS is corrupted and I can't use my manufacturer's flash program to restore it. How can I restore it?
If you cannot get any display, get a PCI graphics card, put it in your system along with the GeForce, and plug your monitor into it. You should now be able to use NVFlash to reflash your GeForce's Video BIOS.
If you do not have a PCI graphics card spare, create a boot floppy disc on another system (select 'Copy system files' when you format it). Create a file called 'autoexec.bat' in the main directory of the floppy disc, and put the following line only inside:
nvflash -p -h -ffilename.ext
where filename.ext is the name of the BIOS flash file that you are going to use. Also copy nvflash.exe and dos4gw.exe into the main directory of the floppy disc.
Then put the disc in the drive and start the computer. The floppy disc should be read within 30 seconds or so. You should soon notice the keyboard lights going mad - this means that your video BIOS is being flashed. Your computer should reboot when finished, and hopefully your video card will then work.
If you want to get your original manufacturer's video BIOS back, try using WinAce to open your manufacturer's flash program file and see if you can extract the raw BIOS file from it. You can use NVFlash with this raw BIOS file. This has been tested with ASUS BIOS files.