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| Video Card Support video card support forum; XFX, eVGA, ATI, PNY, Asus, Diamond |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 54
OS: XP
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Repairing physical damage to a video card
I have an ATI x800 SE PCI-E with an ever so small piece of one of the gold-plated contacts chipped off (I forgot what they are specifically called). I cannot even get to the BIOS screen due to the fact that nothing comes on the monitor. I just noticed this on the card and want to know if/how I can fix it. I am good with soldering so I'm wondering how realistic it is to even get this graphics card working for even a short while.
The card belongs to a computer I am fixing for someone, but I would really like to have this completed tomorrow, so buying a new on online is not an option right now....and, sadly, I am all out of my cheap PCI video cards to hold me over in the mean time. |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Moderator Hardware Team
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Re: Repairing physical damage to a video card
You can try some solder but I would delay and buy a replacement. You may screw up the computer even more if you do it incorrectly.
Also , are you sure that this is the problem with the card? Some areas on the agp bus connector simply do not have gold contacts at all.
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#3 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 54
OS: XP
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Re: Repairing physical damage to a video card
Quote:
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#4 (permalink) |
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Moderator Hardware Team
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Re: Repairing physical damage to a video card
Have you trouble shoot every other possibility? It's not normal for contacts to wear off , I have some very old cards that have been moved several times and they still have all their contacts.
Are you trying to install this card into this machine? Was it already installed?
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#5 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 54
OS: XP
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Re: Repairing physical damage to a video card
Quote:
Later, I pulled the video card and happened to notice two things. The first was the fact that two of the gold contact plates were worn off by about 25% (I recently looked at them and can clearly see that there is about 75% of the plate left on both). The second thing was that the text which appeared on my boot screen is the very part # printed on the under side of the video card. That was when I though I should try to fix the card while I wait for the new one to come in the mail. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Moderator Hardware Team
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Re: Repairing physical damage to a video card
If it was sitting in a garage any number of component could be subject to moisture or environmental problems like dust or dirt from the garage.
I once pulled our old gateway from a storage unit after a mere year and a half there. It gave several errors when trying to boot it right out of storage. But soon after fixed itself. The dell you found however may not. Does the machines onboard video function?
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#7 (permalink) | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 54
OS: XP
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Re: Repairing physical damage to a video card
Quote:
A friend of mine suggested that I use some trace on the card. I haven't done that before, but I was also thinking about using a strand of brass wire brush bristle. I've never had to improvise on something like this before. Any thoughts on those ideas? |
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