shamino wrote on 2023-06-28, 00:23:You seem to have the same symptoms I get on a Diamond Viper V770 TNT2 card. The system boots and everything acts like it thinks […]
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You seem to have the same symptoms I get on a Diamond Viper V770 TNT2 card. The system boots and everything acts like it thinks it's working but the display is severely garbled, like what you showed. I was even able to boot a linux CD and see signs of a working mouse pointer. I wonder if this is a common failure mode on TNT2.
No idea about the repair though. I bought some RAM chips a couple years ago thinking I'd try replacing them someday but I haven't tried it.
It's disappointing to find out that it might be a GPU issue. My thinking has been that a GPU issue wouldn't leave the card in a still "logically" functioning state, so it must be RAM. Maybe I'm wrong about that.
I've had several Geforce2 MX cards from random lots and they always seem to work. They're very reliable, perhaps because they are low power. TNT2 is a hotter chip.
Тhanks for sharing the information about exactly the same problem with this generation of videocards. I had no idea it could be a common problem. Maybe they'll become more expensive (as those in working condition will drastically drop in numbers with time) sooner than expected 😁 But I have some hope, that it's not physical damage to the BGA solder joints or physically degraded with the time VRAM.
Trashbytes wrote on 2023-06-28, 02:47:
Cracked BGA joints can leave it in a mostly working state, would only take one or two damaged balls to produce a garbled display, one option is to remove all the plastic parts and heat sink and hit the gpu die with a hot air gun for ~30 seconds from both sides. chances are that it may reflow it enough to start working correctly again. (This card thankfully doesn't have any SMD parts on the back making this an easy thing to try)
I would also check all the SMD components that are on the traces leading to the VGA port, one of them may have died preventing a clear signal reaching the VGA port.
Its not a permanent fix however and much like the baking fix for G80 cards it'll eventually break again but if you can get a proper picture from the card you can then diagnose if the Vram is also bad and if its worth trying to fix the card.
Everything you wrote has its reason. But today I intend to try with BIOS reflashing fix. And I'll explain why I keep some hope that there's a chance to avoid hot air gun treatment.
Sometimes hardware gives symptoms like its broken, but everything is software related (BIOS). Here's fresh example - not related to this NV TNT2, but another onboard video with dedicated VRAM:
In this very same box of antiques I found an old IBM Aptiva mobo with ATI Rage Pro Turbo AGP videochip and 4 megs of dedicated SGRAM. It is in fully working condition. On this board the original BIOS from IBM only supports the first generation PII Klamath CPUs (it lacks microcode for Celerons or newer PIIs) and works flawlessly with them (I still have one unlocked PII 266 that runs fine with 3* 100MHZ FSB). When I put in its slot some old Celeron Mendocino (I have Celly 333) the mobo POSTs (BIOS complains about mismatched CPU code (missing microcode) but everything is fine), loads OS, etc., except the fact that when the onboard ATI Rage is used in random time period after the system was booted the picture on screen becomes like patterned carpet (VRAM problem symptom) and the system freezes. But when this mobo is used with same unsupported from the IBM BIOS Celeron and some PCI videocard (no AGP slot is available) there's no such a problem. So I always thought for years (until now) that it has some defective onboard VRAM chip. These days I decided to solve the problem with unsupported newer (than Klamath core) Mendocino CPUs and eventually with newer Deschutes core PIIs... I managed to dig-up from the official Fujitsu(-Siemens) support site a newer BIOS image file for machine (thank you Fujitsu for your long-term support, but why the heck some things are so deep buried?!) with exactly the same mobo (Acer V66XA - Acer has the most terrible support, literally there is no support for like 10 years old machines and laptops) that is with support for these newer CPUs. I reflashed the IBM BIOS (it was not an easy process due to some checksum check restrictions in non-standard phoenix-like BIOS, but finally I've managed to get there) with the BIOS for Fujitsu-Siemens machine and now everything with Celly 333 Mendocino is OK during boot process. And the most interesting part - no more VRAM-like problems with integrated ATI Rage when used with Mendocino core Celerons!
So this gives me some hope that maybe this well preserved videocard has some "bit rot" problem with its BIOS. Recently I watched some videos on YT with degraded BIOS and reflash BIOS repairs (BitsUndBolts YT channel).
I have to find some suitable flash software (years ago I used NVflash in pure DOS to update BIOS on some newer than TNT2 videocards). Today I'll search for such a software. I'm not sure if Flashrom supports this card (on it site it is marked with ??? for untested, but maybe working) either not sure for Uniflash (It is too old).
My plan is to reflash BIOS with known dump from good card - Joseph_Joestar shared useful link here. Then if this does not give some positive result, I'll try to resolder VRAM chips and some other solder joints on the PCB. As a last resort - GPU hot air gun trick. At least trash bin is always an option 😀
For now I will not try to destroy this card with physical interventions 😀
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