Hello,
A few months ago, I was trying to build a PC out of spare parts for one of my friend's kids. It didn't need to be anything crazy, just to run Minecraft and a few other non-GPU intensive games. Locally, someone listed a 560 4gb for 120 bucks, just had pictures of the card which appeared to be in great shape. I bought it, kid seemed nice enough, came in an anti-static bag and such. Got home, installed it and got a display, but when I booted into windows, it attempted to download drivers for the card and caused the PC to lock up.
If I leave the card in, it creates a no-boot condition. Screen just stays black. I uninstalled the card, switched to onboard graphics, used DDU to uninstall all drivers. Reinstalled the card, and same thing happened. Maybe I thought there could be a conflict with that specific PC, so I tried on my other computer with dual PCI slots. Same thing happened there.
I attempted to trouble shoot it for a while over the course of a week or so before giving up and accepting I was conned by a high schooler.
Fast forward to now, I got to thinking....what if it had been used for mining, and as 4gb couldn't be used for Ethereum around the time I had bought it...what if it had a bad flash on it? I found a bios that seems to match the sticker on the back of the card, and going through some tom foolery with ATIflasher (P/n mismatch on the windows version, ended up running it on boot and getting the rom flashed) I was optimistic that I had fixed the card....but nope, boots up, goes to get drivers and then kills itself.
Any ideas?
Sticker on back of card
BIOS I had used: https://www.techpowerup.com/vgabios/205824/205824
There were a few other BIOS I had flashed that were similar to the sticker, but all ended up in the same situation.
I could not find a BIOS switch anywhere on card.
GPU-z just puts out a general "windows display adaptor" info page...doesn't list shaders or anything. But if it would help, I could try and run it and get a picture before the PC freezes.
A few months ago, I was trying to build a PC out of spare parts for one of my friend's kids. It didn't need to be anything crazy, just to run Minecraft and a few other non-GPU intensive games. Locally, someone listed a 560 4gb for 120 bucks, just had pictures of the card which appeared to be in great shape. I bought it, kid seemed nice enough, came in an anti-static bag and such. Got home, installed it and got a display, but when I booted into windows, it attempted to download drivers for the card and caused the PC to lock up.
If I leave the card in, it creates a no-boot condition. Screen just stays black. I uninstalled the card, switched to onboard graphics, used DDU to uninstall all drivers. Reinstalled the card, and same thing happened. Maybe I thought there could be a conflict with that specific PC, so I tried on my other computer with dual PCI slots. Same thing happened there.
I attempted to trouble shoot it for a while over the course of a week or so before giving up and accepting I was conned by a high schooler.
Fast forward to now, I got to thinking....what if it had been used for mining, and as 4gb couldn't be used for Ethereum around the time I had bought it...what if it had a bad flash on it? I found a bios that seems to match the sticker on the back of the card, and going through some tom foolery with ATIflasher (P/n mismatch on the windows version, ended up running it on boot and getting the rom flashed) I was optimistic that I had fixed the card....but nope, boots up, goes to get drivers and then kills itself.
Any ideas?
Sticker on back of card
BIOS I had used: https://www.techpowerup.com/vgabios/205824/205824
There were a few other BIOS I had flashed that were similar to the sticker, but all ended up in the same situation.
I could not find a BIOS switch anywhere on card.
GPU-z just puts out a general "windows display adaptor" info page...doesn't list shaders or anything. But if it would help, I could try and run it and get a picture before the PC freezes.