Geri wrote on 2025-08-07, 11:54:
Almost all of the old cards have various forms of degradation issues from various reasons. From bad solder joints to capacitor or vrm issues, to internal chip failures, bios chip failures, design flaws in the pcb or in the heating itself, sometimes trace degradations. You can't just buy another type, and expect it will work, because it maybe not have a particular issue, but it will have another type of issue instead. Regardless, all of the cards with 8800 or 9800 name i have seen was already either fully dead, or gave me garbled screen. Except a 8800gt which i kept.
Well, that's true. But also it is common for all old hardware. The stuff is not designed to last for decades, some things will die. And in many cases it is repairable - capacitors can be replaced, bios can be reflashed or replaced, VRM components can be replaced, even vram can be replaced, etc.
GPU failure is not repairable though, because this are not made anymore and the only way to get a new one is to get another card. And bumpgate leads to GPU failure, especially in certain conditions. Like if temperatures consistently stay above 70C under load and worse - regularly cross 70C threshold back and forth.
That's why bumpgate affected hardware, especially stuff with cooling systems designed for certain temperatures unacceptable for this chips, failed so much even when it was new. And will still fail nowadays, if it was not used enough back then and managed to survived.
I suspect if still completely working, not "repaired" or anything, card was to be found, like may be completely new one - it would be possible to install a more modern overkill cooler which would keep it at around 50-60C and keep it working for quite a while. I have a few bumpgate affected chips like nforce4 motherboards which had good cooling from the beginning and lasted for decades at this point...