VOGONS


First post, by 9646gt

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I have windows ME installed on my HP Pavilion 6475Z. ISpecs are:
Celeron 455 (OC to 583MHZ)
96 MB RAM (256MB coming soon)
Nvidia Geforce 3 ti200 (actually an Asus v8200t2 deluxe) that is overclocked to 230mhz CPU and 525MHz Memory.
Asus MEB-VM Motherboard (OEM Version) I think 440BX chipset
Monitor is Dell 2007FP

Software is:
Windows ME with Unofficial Cumlative update (this problem occurred on a fresh install before installing this)
Nvidia ForceWare 81.89
Internet Explorer 6 SP1
DirectX 6,7,9.0c

Here is the issue...I have disabled all suspend settings in the BIOS. Even HDD thinking they were causing errors. I left only Windows Power Management in place inside Windows. Every time the PC goes go turn off the display I get a blue screen that says

An Error has Occurred Tp Continue: Press Enter to return to Windows, or
Press CTRL+ALT+DEL to restart your computer (followed by info about losing date)
ERROR: 0E : 0028 : F000FF53
Press any key to continue.

If I press CTRL+ALT+DEL it reboots and forces me to click restore active desktop and usually the resolution has dropped all the way back to 800x600 16bit. If I just hit enter it goes to the desktop with only a quarter of it visible on the left of my screen like it is pushed off the screen.

I tried updating chipset drivers but it tells me the version of Windows I am using already knows how to handle my chipset. I have what I believe are the very last drivers for Win9x for my video card. If I disable all suspend settings in BIOS and Windows...no errors. Just stuck with tons of power usage 🤣. Any ideas? I have no Yellow "!" in Device Manager and Device Manager shows APM version to be 1.2 and has an option to force APM 1.0 and disable power status polling.

Mother Board Resources in DM shows a Input/output range of 0028-0029 is in use by something. And shows Memory Range FFFF0000-FFFFFFFF.

Reply 1 of 6, by AlaricD

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9646gt wrote:

Nvidia Geforce 3 ti200 (actually an Asus v8200t2 deluxe) that is overclocked to 230mhz CPU and 525MHz Memory.

Maybe powering off the monitor (which the video card must respond to) and the associated power management events that take place is what demonstrates the 230/525 overclock isn't stable. Return to stock clocks and see what happens-- if it's fine, then start slowly incrementing upwards.

Reply 2 of 6, by Tiido

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Outside clocks I would blame the nVidia drivers, the last ones are very buggy. The card you have will work with older ones and likely has improved performance too with them.

T-04YBSC, a new YMF71x based sound card & Official VOGONS thread about it
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Reply 3 of 6, by AlaricD

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Tiido wrote:

Outside clocks I would blame the nVidia drivers, the last ones are very buggy. The card you have will work with older ones and likely has improved performance too with them.

That is a good point-- back then, the *latest* drivers didn't always prove to be *best*, although when it's the final release of a driver it *should* be at least more stable than predecessors.

I'm still thinking it's the physical layer-- the card is overclocked. I'd be sure it worked at the manufacturer's baseline specs before trying to overclock it.

Reply 4 of 6, by leileilol

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I've had this symptom with a Geforce2 in Me way back in 2000 (switching to text mode would be fatal, be it BSODs or alt-entering a prompt - but sometimes) so I doubt driver age would matter much.

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long live PCem

Reply 5 of 6, by 9646gt

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Thanks for the reply guys. It happens without overclocking on a fresh install with just the drivers installed for everything. I determined the card is a bit overkill for the CPU/build and Nvidia cards seem to be not play well with EA games like the Need For Speed series for me so far. I ordered a Radeon 7500 and will probably just through this Asus v8200t2 deluxe up on eBay once I do some testing.

Reply 6 of 6, by 386DX40

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I have a similar HP 4450 system with this same motherboard. I fought it for days trying to get anything outside of a Voodoo 3 AGP or old S3 AGP card working reliably. Finally came up with a solution to get my TNT2 Pro 16MB working in this system as I figure this is a good match for a Celeron 533MHz and limited 66MHz FSB...after about giving up. Most everything I tried originally would result in booting to a flashing green cursor in the top left corner or game/desktop lockups.

First I used Flashrom 0.9.8 DOS to erase the HP Phoenix BIOS and flash in the Asus beta Award BIOS for this board. I then rebooted and used Asus aflash and reflashed the Asus BIOS again just to be sure. Then after lots of struggling I figured out AGP aperture has to be set at exactly 16MB, the 12.41 drivers must be used, and using Rivatuner I forced AGP mode from 2X to 1X and sideband/fast-writes off. The system is now very stable running Windows 98 SE and I have been playing through System Shock 2 and Half-Life with no problems. Quake III benches at about 48fps 800x600 high settings (16-bit textures and colors)....so CPU limited. Hope this helps.

Im gonna try a Geforce 2 MX200 in this system next and see if that works as I can use the same 12.41 drivers. I kinda doubt newer drivers will work, based on my previous experiences.