In article <(E-Mail Removed)>,
(E-Mail Removed) wrote:
> I got a new 9600xt card today. Put it in my pc, which until now has
> run flawlessly. Passed the post and started to load windows, then
> shut down completely. Tried to turn it back on, but nothing. I
> noticed that the agp warning led was on. I replaced the card with my
> old one (gigabyte radeon 9200, 128mb). The computer stared up fine.
> Put the new card in, the agp led came on. Put the old card back in,
> no problems at all.
>
> Does anyone know if there are compatibility problems between the a7n8x
> deluxe and the 9600xt? And if there are, how do you know what agp
> cards will be compatible with this mobo?
>
> Computer:
>
> Asus A7N8X Deluxe 2.0
> Gigabyte Radeon 9200 128MB (trying to use ATI 9600XT 256MB)
> 2 Corsair PC3200 DDR 400 - 512MB each
> 1 Kingston HyperX PC3200 DDR 400 - 512 MB
> 1 120MB Maxtor HD
> 2 120 WD HD
> AOpen DVD-RW
> Memorex DVD-RW
> 500W Power Supply
> MSI TV Tuner Card
The red LED is AGP warn. When I traced the circuit before,
it appears to be connected to the TYPEDET# signal, on pin A2.
Your motherboard is a 1.5V only motherboard. The pictures of
the video card show it has the 1.5V slot cut in it, meaning
the video card also is 1.5V only. The video card should
be grounding TYPEDET#, indicating it wants to run at 1.5V.
If the pin doesn't manage to pull down the signal on A2, the
red LED lights, and the power switch is gated off.
What does this mean ? A couple of possibilities. The AGP warn
circuit could have failed (but your 9200 still works, so it
likely isn't that). It could be that the company that made your
9600XT, used a resistor to pull pin A2 to GND, when the AGP
spec says to connect the pin directly to ground. I've read
of at least one case, where the person posting measured the
resistance from A2 to GND, and found there was a low value
resistor there (like maybe 50-100 ohms or so). In a manufacturing
environment, a test engineer could insist that the design
engineer add a resistor to aid in automated test (which is
stupid, but that is how the game is played). The design
engineer should tell the test engineer to get stuffed,
but it is hard to predict which engineer will win :-)
If the test engineer wins, then his video card will likely
have occasional problems in Asus motherboards (the ones
equipped with the AGP warn protection circuit).
I would swap for another brand of 9600XT and try again.
I don't think that pair is totally incompatible, but it
could be a simple problem with the current brand you bought.
Maybe another pair of design and test engineers will reach
a different decision.
Here is some "fun with A2", back when 1.5V only motherboards
were first invented. The Asus circuit does the job of the
multimeter, measuring the resistance from A2 to GND, automatically
protecting the user from a dead motherboard. I have noticed
that more recent AGP motherboards have had the circuit removed,
presumably to save $0.50 or so.
http://www.vanshardware.com/articles...9_i845_AGP.htm
HTH,
Paul