I pulled my Parhelia out tonight. I used to have an aftermarket heatsink and memory Heat sinks at a 230/600 overclock. I pulled both sets of heatsinks off and installed the Parhelia into my Shuttle box and replaced the stock HS and fan. I was getting werid corruption...so I thought it was an issue with the ATI drivers and the Matrox drivers, so I did a fresh install of WinXP SP1 and still got the same currupton. I went back and underclocked the card to 200/400 and still have the same problem and the only way I can get rid of it is if I turn off all HW acceleration. I had the Parhelia in my shuttle box for a couple days when I first got it and didnt have any problems, so I don't think its a PS issue with it. I've attached a pic to show you the problem I'm having with it.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Bad Parhelia?
Collapse
X
-
Yeah, it sure looks like heat, but if it didn't go away you might have really borked the card.Gigabyte P35-DS3L with a Q6600, 2GB Kingston HyperX (after *3* bad pairs of Crucial Ballistix 1066), Galaxy 8800GT 512MB, SB X-Fi, some drives, and a Dell 2005fpw. Running WinXP.
Comment
-
Originally posted by [GDI]Raptor
You did remember to have thermal grease between the chip and the HS?
Just curious that I never had any problems with it running overclocked before and the memory was still in specs and it was only 10mhz OC on the core...and from what I understand the Parhelia has Thermal protection on it.Why is it called tourist season, if we can't shoot at them?
Comment
-
I've had similar corruption in the past. Mostly with my G400 under Win2k (but also on Win98).
I've been running a Parhelia for the last year and have had occasional corruption just like that on Win2k and WinXP, Win2k was a _lot_ more prone to it, especially under early revisions of drivers.
You won't just belive it, but I rebooted about an hour ago after 3 days uptime, and had exactly the same corruption on the log in screen. All I did was power down the machine, leave it for a few seconds and power up, problem gone.
I've only ever seen this on Boot up, both on a warm and cold systems. The only thing I can suggest is to power down, wait a few seconds and power up again.
Neither of my Matrox cards are overclocked, nor will I ever overclock them.
Robert.--
Robert Hodkinson, SF nut, Sound nut and a Render-head.
reply email is bag.it@ntlworld.com
The only 'wave shape', I want to see, is on the beach.
Comment
-
But that was because of VIA chipsets, wasn't it?
Originally posted by bag_it
I've had similar corruption in the past. Mostly with my G400 under Win2k (but also on Win98).
I've been running a Parhelia for the last year and have had occasional corruption just like that on Win2k and WinXP, Win2k was a _lot_ more prone to it, especially under early revisions of drivers.
You won't just belive it, but I rebooted about an hour ago after 3 days uptime, and had exactly the same corruption on the log in screen. All I did was power down the machine, leave it for a few seconds and power up, problem gone.
I've only ever seen this on Boot up, both on a warm and cold systems. The only thing I can suggest is to power down, wait a few seconds and power up again.
Neither of my Matrox cards are overclocked, nor will I ever overclock them.
Robert.P4 Northwood 1.8GHz@2.7GHz 1.65V Albatron PX845PEV Pro
Running two Dell 2005FPW 20" Widescreen LCD
And of course, Matrox Parhelia | My Matrox histroy: Mill-I, Mill-II, Mystique, G400, Parhelia
Comment
-
Originally posted by crossbonesx
Seen this happen on a geforce 4. Its a bios issue. Reflash the bios or update it.Last edited by GT98; 7 May 2003, 07:32.Why is it called tourist season, if we can't shoot at them?
Comment
-
This may sound really stupid or that I am trying to insult your own intelligence but I and a friend had a very similiar problem. The solution was quite simple, switch off pc and monitor remove the monitor cable from the parhelia. Then re-attach and make sure it is secure and boot up PC and that might fix your problem
Comment
-
Originally posted by 3dfx
This may sound really stupid or that I am trying to insult your own intelligence but I and a friend had a very similiar problem. The solution was quite simple, switch off pc and monitor remove the monitor cable from the parhelia. Then re-attach and make sure it is secure and boot up PC and that might fix your problemWhy is it called tourist season, if we can't shoot at them?
Comment
-
I did some more playing around...I just noticed that Powerdesk isnt loading up and I tried running MTSTU on my card and came back with two errors: x9797 and x0709 saying it couldnt get clocks off the card. I reflashed the card again using the BIN file on the CD and Still no luck. If I enable HW accellation it still currupts the screenLast edited by GT98; 7 May 2003, 13:45.Why is it called tourist season, if we can't shoot at them?
Comment
-
WyWyWyWy,
Your right, I'm running an ASUS A7V, which uses the KT133 chipset.
At the moment i'm not to bothered about it, it only happens to me about 4 times a year.
Robert.--
Robert Hodkinson, SF nut, Sound nut and a Render-head.
reply email is bag.it@ntlworld.com
The only 'wave shape', I want to see, is on the beach.
Comment
-
Originally posted by bag_it
WyWyWyWy,
Your right, I'm running an ASUS A7V, which uses the KT133 chipset.
At the moment i'm not to bothered about it, it only happens to me about 4 times a year.
Robert.P4 Northwood 1.8GHz@2.7GHz 1.65V Albatron PX845PEV Pro
Running two Dell 2005FPW 20" Widescreen LCD
And of course, Matrox Parhelia | My Matrox histroy: Mill-I, Mill-II, Mystique, G400, Parhelia
Comment
Comment