Unless you can afford to replace destroyed hardware, it's always good to avoid overclocking components unless you completely know what you're doing.
well the problem is that i went to far trying to make riva tuner to work. I'm starting to think could it be a video card bios problem. Plus EVGA warrenty cover this if it cant be fixed?
Did you uninstall them properly? Download driver cleaner pro and install it. Uninstall whatever drivers you have, restart, press F8 repeatedly as it boots up, boot up in safe mode, run Driver cleaner pro for all Nvidia drivers, restart, install the newest drivers. Restart again and it should work. Also try uninstalling Rivatuner.
I would put Rivatuner back and undo whatever you did.
You probably messed up the video BIOS...
And no, eVGA will definitely not cover that.
You probably messed up the video BIOS...
And no, eVGA will definitely not cover that.
so are you saying to install riva tuner again? But how will that fix my video bios?
There is a new version of riva tuner since yesterday or so, might check it out as new cards are added.
EVGA and XFX both cover overclocking, yep. Not BIOS overclocking, but overclocking through RivaTuner should be fine.Overdose wrote:
Plus EVGA warrenty cover this if it cant be fixed?
"people in ny have a general idea of how to drive. one of the pedals goes forward the other one prevents you from dying"
GOOD NEWS
i got all my clocks back and i can now overclock!
heres what i did if anyone encounters the same problem:
-flash video bios
-reinstall drivers
-reinstall riva tuner ( force driver emulation, add 92 = 610h-61Fh,600h to the Rivatuner.cfg, and enable diver-level hardware overclocking on reboot and detect now)
i got all my clocks back and i can now overclock!
heres what i did if anyone encounters the same problem:
-flash video bios
-reinstall drivers
-reinstall riva tuner ( force driver emulation, add 92 = 610h-61Fh,600h to the Rivatuner.cfg, and enable diver-level hardware overclocking on reboot and detect now)