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Is this gtx 750ti repairable or already half dead?

This is a ASUS GTX  750ti OC 2GB gpu. Any chance to repair ?

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It could be solder points coming loose of some components (like VRAM, GPU itself, even the display outputs), or even the cable or monitor. Repairable? Sure. Worth it? I dont think so for a 750ti, but you could try.

CPU: i7-2600K 4751MHz 1.44V (software) --> 1.47V at the back of the socket Motherboard: Asrock Z77 Extreme4 (BCLK: 103.3MHz) CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-D15 RAM: Adata XPG 2x8GB DDR3 (XMP: 2133MHz 10-11-11-30 CR2, custom: 2203MHz 10-11-10-26 CR1 tRFC:230 tREFI:14000) GPU: Asus GTX 1070 Dual (Super Jetstream vbios, +70(2025-2088MHz)/+400(8.8Gbps)) SSD: Samsung 840 Pro 256GB (main boot drive), Transcend SSD370 128GB PSU: Seasonic X-660 80+ Gold Case: Antec P110 Silent, 5 intakes 1 exhaust Monitor: AOC G2460PF 1080p 144Hz (150Hz max w/ DP, 121Hz max w/ HDMI) TN panel Keyboard: Logitech G610 Orion (Cherry MX Blue) with SteelSeries Apex M260 keycaps Mouse: BenQ Zowie FK1

 

Model: HP Omen 17 17-an110ca CPU: i7-8750H (0.125V core & cache, 50mV SA undervolt) GPU: GTX 1060 6GB Mobile (+80/+450, 1650MHz~1750MHz 0.78V~0.85V) RAM: 8+8GB DDR4-2400 18-17-17-39 2T Storage: HP EX920 1TB PCIe x4 M.2 SSD + Crucial MX500 1TB 2.5" SATA SSD, 128GB Toshiba PCIe x2 M.2 SSD (KBG30ZMV128G) gone cooking externally, 1TB Seagate 7200RPM 2.5" HDD (ST1000LM049-2GH172) left outside Monitor: 1080p 126Hz IPS G-sync

 

Desktop benching:

Cinebench R15 Single thread:168 Multi-thread: 833 

SuperPi (v1.5 from Techpowerup, PI value output) 16K: 0.100s 1M: 8.255s 32M: 7m 45.93s

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I mean if it's broken I guess it's worth trying?

 

My friend once came to me with some old GT710 he found that would not boot at all and he wanted to try and fix it and give it to a friend who didn't have a PC. We put it in the oven (I think at a little under 300F for like 15 minutes) and than took it out to let cool. Booted up first time, and to my knowledge it's still working over a year later. We were blown away haha. 

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I don't think it's worth it. You can probably find a different GPU that will do you better than a 750ti, like a 1050. If you don't feel like spending 50 bucks you can probably find an old 750ti for literall pennies. Overall wouldn't be worth it to save that thing, you can probably recycle that and just buy something better. The only good thing I can say about trying to fix that is because it's cheap as hell you can probably learn how to fix it but it'll still be time consuming and maybe dangerous.

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Have you confirmed it's the GTX 750 Ti and not something else, like the motherboard/PCIe bus, the cable, the monitor, etc.? Do you have the same result when you move that video card to a different computer? Do you have the same result when you use a different video card in the same slot?

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34 minutes ago, SPARTAN VI said:

Have you confirmed it's the GTX 750 Ti and not something else, like the motherboard/PCIe bus, the cable, the monitor, etc.? Do you have the same result when you move that video card to a different computer? Do you have the same result when you use a different video card in the same slot?

yes i am sure this is 750ti and have also tested in other system, same result...

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