Ydee wrote on 2024-10-13, 09:03:
If it´s B2 contact, then it is +5V line.
It's A2 since it's on the back side of the card. That's the line for the computer to detect whether the video card is AGP 4x capable. On the card it's hooked to Ground and because that line is burned and no longer hooks to Ground, the computer will probably only run the card in AGP 2x mode.
Here's the fan circuit for the Geforce 3 which remains the same for the Ti500. Pin A1 on the AGP slot is 12v and that hooks to the positive side of the fan. The NPN transistor hooks to a GPIO line on the GPU so that it can control the fan through PWM, pulsing it high or low turns the fan on/off by having that transistor turn on to connect the fan's negative pin to Ground. Do that fast enough and you have working fan speed control.
The attachment geforce3-fan.png is no longer available
edit: trying to figure out the history of these cards is always tough. I just spotted that mine has flux around the two polymer capacitors at the edge of the card and I don't think I put that there. I wonder why someone would resolder those?
And I don't understand how that NPN transistor could not be present but also look so clean in that area if it was removed. There's no way that the fan can work without it because the fan's ground pin has no path to ground except through that.
Either way, something I've done on cards without fans and without that transistor is bridge the board-ground and fan-ground with a piece of wire, basically making the ground path always there so the fan works without fan control.