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October 11th, 2001, 06:08 PM
#1
My system specs
Compaq 5441 (Approx. 2 years old)
7.8G drive (I know, small - want/need a bigger one)
466Mhz AMD/K6-2
184M ram (one 56M chip, two 64M chips)
Win98se
Envision EN-780E 17" flatscreen monitor
Not sure what motherboard it has...
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October 11th, 2001, 08:17 PM
#2
It's a compaq 5441 motherboard. What is your Question regarding the Board.
Compaqs have there own MOBO's.
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"What works for One person May not work for Another"
God Is My Judge dLagace=DANIMAL
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October 11th, 2001, 08:22 PM
#3
the question is in a previous post (called "Vsync error?? help??"), but essentially i'm looking for information on how to disable Vsync. I'm trying to install an Nvidia GeForce2 3D card, but it keeps giving me a Vsync error.
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October 11th, 2001, 08:31 PM
#4
You have checked your video Card settings?
Have you updated the drivers for your video Card?
Have you updated the drivers for your Monitor?
When do you get the error?( what exactly Happens?)
What version DirectX do you have? try the latest version.
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"What works for One person May not work for Another"
God Is My Judge dLagace=DANIMAL
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October 11th, 2001, 08:48 PM
#5
Ok, here's what happens.
When I install the card in the PCI slot, and turn on the computer, everything is cool. The red Compaq logo comes up, the regular dos booting happens, and the initial Windows 98 booting screen is fine. (You know, the one with the clouds, and the scrolling bar on the bottom.) But, when Windows starts to load up, the monitor shuts off, then comes back on, black, with a purple box in the middle that says, "Vsync Error", and then the monitor shuts off again.
I've got DirectX 8 installed on the system. I need to find out how to disable the on-board video, I think...
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October 11th, 2001, 09:27 PM
#6
Go into Safe Mode an dDelete all reference to video cards in the device manager. Reboot and install the drivers.
If the problem persists the you may need to drop the resolution in the video card settings due to your monitor not having enough Guts to handle the Card.
What kind of monitor and what year is it?
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"What works for One person May not work for Another"
God Is My Judge dLagace=DANIMAL
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October 11th, 2001, 09:28 PM
#7
Ok, I just tried it again, and wrote down the exact error message. it says:
Attention:
Out of Range
H: .1Khz V:141.3hz
Any ideas?
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October 11th, 2001, 09:32 PM
#8
i just read your other post called vsync error And there you were asking how to get into the Bios.
Hit f10 on boot up and check there for the settings on the Vsync.
Are still using the Flatscreen Monitor?
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"What works for One person May not work for Another"
God Is My Judge dLagace=DANIMAL
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October 11th, 2001, 09:37 PM
#9
Yeah, still using the 17" flatscreen. I bought it new from Staples about three weeks ago. I actually got into the BIOS, but I couldn't find any reference to Vsync anywhere...
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October 13th, 2001, 06:20 AM
#10
Vsync is the Vertical Synchronisation commonly called refresh rate. It's determined by the video card under control of the video driver, so it's alright until the video driver is loaded & the mode changes. 141 Hz is too high for almost any monitor. Boot into Safe Mode and set the refresh rate for the resolution(s) you are using to something more reasonable, try 75 or 85Hz for example, unless you know the monitor can handle higher rates.
I assume you have installed the correct drivers for the card?
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I used to be Platypus...
The platypus, proof God has a sense of humour.
[This message has been edited by GJFowler (edited October 13, 2001).]
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October 13th, 2001, 08:52 AM
#11
Ok, if you've got the patience, I need to know how to set a refresh rate once I boot in safe mode.
As far as getting drivers installed, I've never been able to make it to that particular point without the video blanking and the error coming up. And, I can't install the drivers without the card installed, so I don't know what to do at this point...
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October 13th, 2001, 11:09 PM
#12
OK, I found your other post on this subject, & the answer may lie in it, and your memory spec of 184M. You said in the other post you plugged the monitor back into the motherboard? So there is onboard video still enabled & sucking up 8M of ram? Does that mean you haven't been disabling the on-board video first? That will definitely cause problems. It will have to be disabled, either with a jumper setting on the motherboard, or via a CMOS Setup option. If the board was one that automatically detects an external video card, the shared memory should be being released giving you the full 192M of ram. Once the on-board video is disabled, you should then be able to boot up the new card without the video chips fighting, and install the correct drivers.
If this isn't the problem let us know, we've got the patience if you have... 
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I used to be Platypus...
The platypus, proof God has a sense of humour.
[This message has been edited by GJFowler (edited October 14, 2001).]
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October 14th, 2001, 07:44 AM
#13
Yes, the computer has 8 meg onboard video, but I never figured out how to disable it. Anyone here familiar with disabling onboard video on compaq motherboards? Mine is the 5441 tower system...
And, the 184 megs of ram that I specified is the total amount I've got...so, after deducting 8 for the onboard, I've got 176 megs.
I'm really starting to just hate this computer. It's fine for 'net surfing, emailing, chatting, etc....but, any old computer can do that. I play Diablo II: Lord of Destruction all the time, which runs absolutely fine - albeit *slightly* slow, but bearably. Plus, I've got Freespace 2, which will sometimes run - then the screen will blank out, but the game continues playing, but only when there's lots of fighter ships on the screens at once, and something (like one of the bigger ship's lasers) makes a big noise - then it blanks out...and that really really annoys me. Anyways, the graphics would be TONS better with a 3D card on both of these games.
But, with the onboard video piece of **** I've got, I can't play Quake 3, or any game built on that engine (for which there are MANY that I'd love to play.)
Argh.
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October 14th, 2001, 02:23 PM
#14
http://web14.compaq.com/falco//detai...FAQnum=FAQ2417
Try here to disable onboard video.
it's for the 4800 but should be the same.
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"What works for One person May not work for Another"
God Is My Judge dLagace=DANIMAL
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October 14th, 2001, 09:30 PM
#15
Ok. I tried both methods listed in the FAQ. First, I tried the method for '98, which was changing the onboard video driver from the SiS530 to Standard PCI adaptor (VGA). I shut off the computer, pulled the power cord out, and installed the card. When I turned it on, it started to go through regular bootup, then same thing - video blanked out, and gave the "out of range" error, but with different numbers for the ranges...this one was "H: 15.7Khz V:35.0Hz" It stayed like that for about 15 seconds, blanked again, then came up as "H: .0Khz V:30.1Hz".
So, I shut it off, pulled the cord out, pulled the card out, and replugged the monitor cord into the onboard video. Then I tried the '95 method, which was going into the system properties, into the hardware profiles, and disabling the onboard audio/video in the hardware profile. Did the same routine with shutting it off, installed the card, turned it on....same thing. Different numbers. First, "H: 17.6Khz V:39.4Hz", 15 seconds later, "H: .0Khz V: 60.2Hz".
This is getting really really frustrating.
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