155 thousand error messages and still going - Revised
Giggy:
I am getting the error messages again to my annoyance as I thought I have fixed this ages ago.
I am giving you 2 pics of the problem in a RAR file because I'm too lazy and I'm not in the mood to find a suitable website that would host my pics.
This is getting to the point that it's annoying the heck out of me to the point of commit necromancy
Any help is appreciated
Edit: Opps forgot the pics
Nec:
Last idea I have is one that has worked for me before with problems. Go to the nVidia site and get the latest drivers for your card, and save them to your hard drive. Uninstall all the nVidia drivers for the card (check to see if you have some old drivers installed for an ATI or a different card, and uninstall those if they are there) through Add/Remove programs. Go to Device Manager and right- click on primary and secondary video cards, selecting to uninstall them both. Reboot, and let Windows find the card again. Then install the drivers you downloaded and reboot when prompted. Hopefully, that will fix it.
I noticed it says System Sentinel. I don't have that on my nVidia control panel anywhere. Never even seen that before.
Leticron:
Quote from: Giggy on 2008 January 08, 09:35:52
I have upgraded my PSU to 500w a few years ago, not that.
is it a faulty PSU?
It's not so much the "Watt"age what matters.
You need at least 18 Amps on the 12V rail.. (23A with PCIe)
H E R E you can calculate, what PSU you really need (add 30% to the result to cover spikes-loads and future upgrades)
-le
Giggy:
Quote from: Leticron on 2008 March 24, 14:19:58
Quote from: Giggy on 2008 January 08, 09:35:52
I have upgraded my PSU to 500w a few years ago, not that.
is it a faulty PSU?
It's not so much the "Watt"age what matters.
You need at least 18 Amps on the 12V rail.. (23A with PCIe)
H E R E you can calculate, what PSU you really need (add 30% to the result to cover spikes-loads and future upgrades)
-le
Looks expensive for the full product, I don't want to try the limited version as it may not give me full results
Leticron:
Go ahead and try the free lite version. It's totally sufficient for its purpose.
Just remember and add ~30% to the results .
All you have to do then is look at a retailer for a matching PSU and check for 18 Amps on the 12V rail (23A if you have a PCI-e graphics card)
and you're all set.
As a techie I realized that especially those complete packages you buy from HP/Compaq, Dell, Gateway etc. are notoriously underpowered so that the slightest change in hardware could throw them off.
Despite the higher price I would try to avoid no-name PSUs ;)
-le
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