100% ad-free

pilot.masman wrote:QUOTE (pilot.masman @ Dec 25 2008, 07:02 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>i highly doubt they would bundle a game incompatable with the card... more likely driver or hardware issues
warranty may end but youve allways got the CGA (consumer gaur...)
hehehe, i got the video card drivers taht was bundled with my video card on CD, when i installed it i got a these drivers are not compatible with the video card you have installed message!!!! i would as others have suggested download and update the video drivers, also it could be some driver issue with the motherboard drivers or that, hope you get it sorted!!In the ongoing battle between objects made of aluminum going hundreds of miles per hour and the ground going zero miles per hour, the ground has yet to lose.
Peppermint wrote:QUOTE (Peppermint @ Dec 22 2008, 04:00 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>... though with all the testing the shop did I doubt it.
Hmmm ... I wouldn't bet on that
I've heard they just install the O/S and check the most common things. Running GFX-intensive games - or even 3D-Bench is usually a bridge too far for them.
Peppermint wrote:QUOTE (Peppermint @ Dec 22 2008, 08:47 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Or would the static be expected out of a 1000w PSU?
A one kilowatt PSU!!???? Are you heating the house as well?
That's going to be an expensive PC to run! All that static doesn't sound right to me either.
Peppermint wrote:QUOTE (Peppermint @ Dec 23 2008, 01:03 AM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Yep, won't be taking it back until after Christmas though. If there is a fault with the video card I might ask them just to put the regular GTX280 in it rather than wait a week or more for another XXX edition one.
The thing I can't understand is that 2 of the games I've tried go fine after they freeze for a bit about 5 minutes into a game. Yet other games like FC2 and the Crysis demo will either have the flickery textures or crash completely, last time I tried the crysis demo I actually got a blue screen error
BSOD ... hmmm ... not good. I think we're all feeling your painIs the PC generally stable - apart from when you try to play GFX intensive games?
Have you tried grabbing the latest nVidia drivers off the nVidia site (and used some cleanup utility to get rid of the old one)?
One thing you may try and do is to find a copy of Ubuntu (Linux) and run it as a "Live CD". It won't touch your HD at all ... but you could let it run a while and see if anything goes wrong. If it does, then you *know* it's your hardware. It ought to find your network, pick up your Internet connevction etc. so you can browse around a bit as you wait for the crash
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 7 guests