Esteve said:
Gene E. Bloch avait soumis l'idée :
Yes... with a Point Of View nVidia GeForce 7300 SE it run's fine.
Not... there aren't
Not... only accepts one pcie card.
But in Syncronous and Asinconous mode ???
Betwen 266 to 350 (speed?)
And some different percentages
But really I do not understand this items.
I think the maxium of gpu speed can be 350x2 and
this GPU it's 800Ghz ???
Not on-board video.
Thank you so mutch.
Bye !
This is a common problem with that GPU from Nvidia (it happens to more
than one brand of video card, so is not card manufacturer specific in
nature). There is a long article here about it.
http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=150630
A respondent from Nvidia, claims the slowness is caused by
caching for the video card memory space.
http://nvidia.s3.amazonaws.com/msd.zip
"System Information
Memory Information
Physical memory cache status
A0000~D0000 uncacheable (MTRR setting)
If you see A0000~D0000 is uncacheable, that mean that the motherboard BIOS
does not have MTRR enabled and is likely the cause of the slow POST issue.
http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?act=attach&type=post&id=21103
For what it's worth, the version of the video BIOS which contains
the workaround is 70.18.36.00.00.
"
It does not appear that Asus offers a fix. Contact Asus Tech Support and perhaps
they will email a fix to you, if one is available. They may not want to put
an updated VBIOS (video card BIOS file) on the web site. There is a contact
address below - replace the " at " in the address with "@".
"Anyone else also having this issue with an ASUS G210/GT220,
please contact us at OC_Support at asus.com
Please provide the part number and PCBA number of your VGA card which
can be found on the barcode sticker on your VGA card. An example
illustration of what the part number and PCBA will look like is below.
http://img156.imageshack.us/img156/2351/partnumber.jpg
"
Using such a video BIOS file, means flash updating the BIOS chip on the video
card itself. There is some danger this may not work. When I flash updated
my old ATI video card, I used a PCI video card to watch the screen, when
the AGP video card was getting its BIOS chip flash updated. I don't know
whether the Asus VBIOS update will require a second video card to be
present or not.
No respondent in the above forums.nvidia.com thread, has successfully received
a VBIOS update, as of July 29, 2010. It looks pretty hopeless. It is
still worthwhile to email "OC_Support" so they know you have the
problem too.
HTH,
Paul