Reply 1 of 4, by manuelink64
- Rank
- Newbie
Hi:
Try to lower the resolution or install different drivers.
this kind of glitches appears with faulty ram modules on the graphics card, bad connection on the PCI/ISA slot,
PCI with weird clock/noise signals.
Regards!
PD: it's that WinME? 🤐
[Unisys CWP] [CPU] AMD-X5-133ADZ [RAM] 64 MB (4x36) FPM [HDD] Seagate 8.4GB [Audio] SB16 SCSI 2 (CT1770) [Video] ATI Mach64VT2 [OS] Windows 95 OSR2.5
Reply 2 of 4, by retardware
- Rank
- Oldbie
Looks like my lot of old Trio64+ cards, whose caps have been dying over the last few years.
If the cards are worth the effort, just try recapping.
But keep in mind that bad caps on MB and PSU can also produce this effect.
Reply 3 of 4, by TreeFrog
My S3 produces similar artifacts, but not always. Perhaps it's not properly plugged into the PCI slot, DSUB connection issues...
Reply 4 of 4, by appiah4
- Rank
- l33t++
Check the legs for any bent pins making contacts. Probably time to recap it though.
Retronautics: A digital gallery of my retro computers, hardware and projects.