I think I jinxed myself by mentioning in another thread that this card was getting long in the tooth. I just got a BSOD from the driver, then recurs on boot after the Windows logo. I uninstalled the Nvidia drivers, and it runs fine on the Windows default VGA driver (luckily), so can at least look for information but at a terrible resolution. I found several similar posts where the card was repaired, but I have never repaired a GPU, so not sure if worth the effort or to replace it (I read posts where people said a 960 is not much over the 580 enough to warrant an "upgrade"). Even during boot I am seeing two artifacts with the card - short vertical lines through all periods (like |.) and horizontal red lines (very faint) all over the display. A component has succumbed to the temps after 4 years, but not sure where to look (and tearing it apart takes the computer offline completely). Does anyone have any advice on if it is worth repairing this, or should I just replace it?
I did a quick search and the
ASUS GTX 970 would be the most likely replacement, but this computer is only PCIe 2.0, so not sure how much it would choke that card (but would also intend to carry any card forward into a future build). I had seen MSI and ASUS 970s recommended as replacements for the 580 since they run cooler than Gigabyte's. Right now, this 580 runs off two (not one) 8-pin connectors on PCIe 2.0, and I have seen some cards
requiring a 6-pin*, so not sure what else I need to be wary of if looking to replace this. Are there any other "gotchas" to worry about?
*Edit - forgot until disassembly that my "8-pins" are actually 6-pins with an extra 2-pin portion to the cable that can easily be used or not used depending on the card being connected.