T-Dub gurus,I just had a GeForce Ti 4200 AGP die on me after a great run (2003-2010 R.I.P.). It outlasted my Radeon 9800 Pro AGP which I bought to replace the GeForce at some point, and then when the ATI died, the GeForce went back in. Obviously I don't use this machine anything graphics intensive.I never had any visual problems with the 4200 and noticed that the fan is in real bad shape; there seems to be a lot of rust on the bearings and the fan doesn't seem to sit very well on the joint. I was wondering what the chances are that the failure is due to the fan and perhaps not the card itself? Should I try another fan on the thing or just say fuck it since it's 7 years old?
3/25/2010 11:58:56 PM
the time/money you spend fixing it can't possibly justify just replacing it, can they?
3/26/2010 12:01:03 AM
i meant NOT just replacing it, i think...i'm tired and can't think
3/26/2010 12:48:49 AM
Well, if the fan failed, it probably burned the card out. So, it's dead Jim.
3/26/2010 3:02:38 AM
That's what I was wondering, will the card automatically burn out if the fan fails? Is there no protection? I don't know a whole lot about video cards. Seems sort of ridiculous that there would be no overheat protection.
3/26/2010 3:54:49 AM
Cards usually throttle back when they start to overheat or just freeze up.
3/26/2010 4:43:13 AM
3/26/2010 8:54:23 AM
ROGAH WILCO
3/26/2010 11:33:21 PM
yeah dude, that card is old as shit, haha
3/28/2010 2:46:22 PM
3/28/2010 3:06:43 PM
I remember when I used to care about shit like this
3/28/2010 3:08:28 PM
3/28/2010 11:34:57 PM
May have been copper peelings, I don't know. Yes I know the card was [old as fuck], I was more curious as to the philosophy than the fact. I'm amazed the card lasted this long.
3/29/2010 9:28:12 PM