Wildfire schreef op 12 april 2004 @ 15:08:
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Oh, dit is een leuke... NOT!
Ik heb dit probleem ook eens gehad. Windows bleef maar over de standaard VGA-drivers zeiken. Ik heb toen echt vanalles geprobeerd, maar het is nooit meer goed gekomen. Gevolg: Windows helemaal opnieuw moeten installeren...
Afijn, ik ga zometeen eerst een image draaien van m'n C-schijf. Daarna zal ik Catalyst 4.4 eens een kans geven.
Haha, das inderdaad een hele vervelende. Wat je ook doet die drivers worden niet goed geinstalleerd en Windhoos blijft met die achterlijke melding komen. Wat er namelijk moet gebeuren is een ATI-Clean Install. Dit houdt in dat een aantal .INF files uit de INF folder uit je windows map moeten gedelete moet worden en daarnaast kan je nog handmatig je registry setting verwijderen.
Onderstaande procedure heeft bij mij geholpen en komt van de RAGE3D site:
I copied this from a previous post. Has worked great for me.
Clean Driver Install: Revision 2
1). Uninstall your current ATI display driver. Do this by going into your control panel and running add/remove programs. ATI Display Driver should be one of the first few on your list. Choose yes when it asks if you would like to uninstall. Choose no when it asks to reboot.
2). Remove all leftover .inf files. Windows will use these to reinstall drivers (or at least try) without giving you an option for a clean install. To do this, you'll want to do a find all files/search, which can be accessed via the start menu. Windows ME has it labelled as search, and I believe Windows 9x has it labelled as find. In the search window, you'll want to enter ati*.inf as the target file. Don't bother making it search your whole hard disk, instead, under the look in field, type in C:\Windows\Inf, and make sure look in sub-folders is checked. Now your set, click find/search. Delete all files which it reports (make sure the location is c:\windows\inf or c:\windows\inf\other, do not delete ati*.inf files in other directories, just in case you chose to search your entire hard drive). Once you've completed the .inf flush, you're now ready to move on.
3). Reboot your computer. Windows will load with a default VGA adapter driver, which the ATI uninstall conveniently installs for you. Little do we know, ATI forgot to take out all the registry settings, ack! Here's what you need to do...
4). Run regedit. To do this, hit Start, click Run, and type regedit in the field and press Enter or hit OK. The windows registry entry will pop up. There are two sections you'll need to delete garbage from, the first one being the key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE. Click the plus next to software and in the directory tree below it you will see a key labelled ATI Technologies, simply highlight this key and hit the delete key on your keyboard. Click yes to confirm removal when Windows prompts you. That will fix all previous tweaks you may have done, so you can ensure a fresh driver install at default settings. Now, on to the next key(s) you'll want to delete. WARNING! The following keys which I recommend you delete automatically assume you are using only one display adapter(video card) in your system. If you are using more than one, I will assume you are literate enough to know which keys can safely be deleted without mucking up your secondary adapter. Go to the registry key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\Class\DISPLAY, click the plus next to DISPLAY and you will see at least one sub key, normally labelled 0000. If your registry is dirty, you will likely see multiple keys, such as 0001, 0002, 0003, and so on. If you have only one video card in your system, it is now safe to delete every sub key of DISPLAY, including 0000. To do this highlight each key respectively and hit the delete key on your keyboard, click yes when Windows asks if you wish to remove the entry. Once you have deleted all keys, it is now time to close the regedit program and move on to the next step.
5). You will now need to go into your system device manager, which can be accessed in two ways. One, by right clicking on My Computer, clicking Properties, and then Device Manager in the following window, or you can access the device manager in your system Control Panel and double clicking on the System icon, and clicking Device Manager in the following window. Under Device Manager click the plus symbol next to Display Adapters, you will now see the Standard PCI adapter listed below. Highlight it and hit the delete key on your keyboard and click yes to confirm when Windows prompts you. It will then ask you to reboot your computer to finish removing the device, click no. Next step.
6). Extract/Unzip/Decompress your Radeon drivers of choice to a location which you will remember (I use C:\Windows\Desktop\Radeon). Once you have extracted the drivers, you can now reboot your computer to manually install them. I do NOT recommend using the ATI setup program to install drivers. When you reboot your computer, Windows will detect new hardware and ask if you wish for it to search for drivers. I always tell Windows where to search, and do not recommend you let Windows search automatically. Since Windows 9x and Windows ME vary slightly in this driver install process, I will assume you are familiar with basic driver installation and can handle pointing Windows to the directory which you extracted the drivers (i.e. C:\Windows\Desktop\Radeon for 7041 whql or C:\Windows\Desktop\Radeon\ATIDrive for all other driver packages). From here you may proceed to let Windows search the specified directories for the .inf file containing the driver install information, and the rest should be fairly self explanatory.
NB!
Alleen ga ik bij stap 6 zelf anders te werk en gebruik dus wél de executable ATI-installer van de Omage Drivers omdat anders het deel van SmartGART niet goed geinstallerd wordt en ed rest van de progs die bij de Omega Drivers horen ook niet op je schrijf komen te staan
Succes
Nog een tip. Zet VPU recover uit als je gaat overclokken, want dan kan je echt gaan zitten wachten op de foutmeldingen. Ook is het in sommige gevallen beter om je kaart op AGP4x te laten lopen, zeker voor de mensen met een VIA KT400 chipset op hun mobo. Mijn Abit AT7-MAX2 komt na een kwartier al snel met vastlopers en reboots als ik de zaak op AGP8x heb staan. AGP4x daarintegen draait als een tierelier. Voor je 3DMARKS maakt AGP4x/8x nagenoeg niets uit, maar wel stabiliteit en ook weer..., zéker als je gaat overclokken
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Voor 3% gewijzigd door
Demon_Eyez op 13-04-2004 09:46
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