I am building a new system and having problems with my G400 MAX graphics card.
The core of my system is a 500Mhz AMD Athlon processor in a Asus K7M motherboard, with 64 MB of PC100 SDRAM and a Matrox Millennium G400 MAX graphics card. All assembly procedures were done while correctly grounded, and none of the components have been mechanically damaged or subjected to excessive force.
When I first installed the card and tried to boot, it gave no signal to the monitor, which remained in "sleep" mode. I tried to reseat the card several times into the AGP slot, as I had heard that it might be somewhat finicky to get the card seated properly. Still, I got nothing on the screen. After this, the card was taken to the dealer it was bought from, and they tried it on their system. They didn't let me see the testing procedure, but they reported that it worked fine on their system (I have no idea of their system specs or any other details). They said that it could be a problem with the card not fitting correctly into the motherboard in some types of cases. They suggested trying to loosen the metal bracket of the card to get the card properly seated. I did this and pushed the card into the AGP slot without the metal bracket, connecting the monitor cable carefully. Now I got an image on the screen after powering up, giving me the bios checkup and boot sequence, and prompting for a startup diskette. After this I powered off, took the card out and inserted it with the metal bracket not screwed on but in its place and tried again. Still OK. After this I powered off and screwed on the screws fastening the metal bracket to the monitor connector #1 and fastened the bracket to the case. Still everything worked fine. After this I again powered off and fastened the screws of port #2. After this, powering up gave no image in the monitor. I removed the last two screws, thinking that they must be forcing the card into a bad position in the AGP slot. I took out the card and reinstalled it again with the bracket first loose, and fastened the two first screws. It seemed solid enough, so I decided to leave it there, as it was working.
I checked the bios settings and made sure that they were as they should be.
I again turned off the computer, in order to read the instructions on how to install Windows 98 on a blank system. After I had the boot diskette and everything else ready, I powered on the computer. It gave me no signal. All I had done after the last time it worked was to turn the power off. The machine had not been moved or bumped, just turned off and back on after some 10 minutes. I tried to remove the card and install it just I had succesfully done earlier, but no image again. I repeated this procedure a few times, even without the bracket to make sure the card was seated as properly as it could be. No help.
Now I read in here that the BIOS of my video card could be damaged. The symptoms sounded very much the same, although as I haven't installed Windows yet, I cannot confirm that it works. I don't know whether the card worked in DOS when they tested it at the dealer's because they said they installed it on an NT machine and it worked fine.
Does anyone here have any experience of similar problems, or can anyone offer some good suggestions on what to do. I'm getting really frustrated here; first it doesn't work, then I get it to work, and then I turn off the power and it works no more. What gives?
The core of my system is a 500Mhz AMD Athlon processor in a Asus K7M motherboard, with 64 MB of PC100 SDRAM and a Matrox Millennium G400 MAX graphics card. All assembly procedures were done while correctly grounded, and none of the components have been mechanically damaged or subjected to excessive force.
When I first installed the card and tried to boot, it gave no signal to the monitor, which remained in "sleep" mode. I tried to reseat the card several times into the AGP slot, as I had heard that it might be somewhat finicky to get the card seated properly. Still, I got nothing on the screen. After this, the card was taken to the dealer it was bought from, and they tried it on their system. They didn't let me see the testing procedure, but they reported that it worked fine on their system (I have no idea of their system specs or any other details). They said that it could be a problem with the card not fitting correctly into the motherboard in some types of cases. They suggested trying to loosen the metal bracket of the card to get the card properly seated. I did this and pushed the card into the AGP slot without the metal bracket, connecting the monitor cable carefully. Now I got an image on the screen after powering up, giving me the bios checkup and boot sequence, and prompting for a startup diskette. After this I powered off, took the card out and inserted it with the metal bracket not screwed on but in its place and tried again. Still OK. After this I powered off and screwed on the screws fastening the metal bracket to the monitor connector #1 and fastened the bracket to the case. Still everything worked fine. After this I again powered off and fastened the screws of port #2. After this, powering up gave no image in the monitor. I removed the last two screws, thinking that they must be forcing the card into a bad position in the AGP slot. I took out the card and reinstalled it again with the bracket first loose, and fastened the two first screws. It seemed solid enough, so I decided to leave it there, as it was working.
I checked the bios settings and made sure that they were as they should be.
I again turned off the computer, in order to read the instructions on how to install Windows 98 on a blank system. After I had the boot diskette and everything else ready, I powered on the computer. It gave me no signal. All I had done after the last time it worked was to turn the power off. The machine had not been moved or bumped, just turned off and back on after some 10 minutes. I tried to remove the card and install it just I had succesfully done earlier, but no image again. I repeated this procedure a few times, even without the bracket to make sure the card was seated as properly as it could be. No help.
Now I read in here that the BIOS of my video card could be damaged. The symptoms sounded very much the same, although as I haven't installed Windows yet, I cannot confirm that it works. I don't know whether the card worked in DOS when they tested it at the dealer's because they said they installed it on an NT machine and it worked fine.
Does anyone here have any experience of similar problems, or can anyone offer some good suggestions on what to do. I'm getting really frustrated here; first it doesn't work, then I get it to work, and then I turn off the power and it works no more. What gives?
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