I’ve been really excited about my new computer, but I’ve spent so much time playing with it that I haven’t had time to post anything about it – other than the fact that I got a new computer. Check out the specs ยป
Archive for the Tag: “Computers”
I should have posted this earlier, but better late than never!
After working on my previous issue with texture corruption in 3D with my Radeon HD 3650, I was perplexed as to why I could not install the v8.9 drivers and CCC, considering the HD 3650 is listed as being supported by version 8.9. I dug into the installer and actually found the issue, and it was simple to fix!
As it turns out, the v8.9 drivers and CCC do support the Radeon HD 3650, but perhaps the card manufacturers – though using the same chipset – identify the chipset differently. The problem I had that prevented my 3650 from being supported was that its Hardware IDs are reported as
PCIVEN_1002&DEV_9596&SUBSYS_00281043
PCIVEN_1002&DEV_9596&CC_030000
PCIVEN_1002&DEV_9596&CC_0300
However, the supported Hardware ID for the ATI Radeon HD 3650 AGP is
PCIVEN_1002&DEV_9596
Thus the only solution that I came up with was also the working solution, and this is what I came up with.
The v8.9 installer comes in two flavors. ATI provides an installer for the Catalyst Control Center (CCC) which includes the drivers, and a standalone installer for the drivers if you don’t want CCC. Either way, the solution is the same. Please note, though, I’m using Windows XP. This solution may not work for Vista users. If it does work in Vista, please let me know.
- Download the installer (either one) from the AMD/ATI site here.
- Run the installer.
- If the installer alerts you that supported hardware was not found, click ok. The installer will close.
- Open either of the following folders, depending on your installer:
C:\ATISUPPORT8-9_xp32_dd_68898XP_INF
C:\ATISUPPORT8-9_xp32_dd_ccc_wdm_enu_68898DriverXP_INF - Open the following file in a text editor:
CX_68898.inf - Locate the heading on line 34:
[ATI.Mfg.NTx86] - Add an extra line below the heading and insert the following text:
"ATI Radeon HD 3650 AGP" = ati2mtag_RV630, PCIVEN_1002&DEV_9596&SUBSYS_00281043
- Save the file and run either of the following, depending on your installer:
C:\ATISUPPORT8-9_xp32_dd_68898\Setup.exe
C:\ATISUPPORT8-9_xp32_dd_ccc_wdm_enu_68898\Setup.exe
If everything goes according to plan, you will have the current drivers and CCC if you chose the CCC installer.
I’ve recently had an issue with my new video card that I have also found the fix for, and I thought I would provide the fix for anyone who might be having the same issue.
My new Asus AH3650 Silent (Radeon HD 3650) came with the Catalyst v8.7 drivers, which were installed properly upon Windows XP bootup. The Radeon HD 3650, in AGP, has issues when displaying certain textures in 3D games. All other aspects of the card worked perfectly, but strange banding and discolloration occured when any D3D game was loaded.
As it turns out, the problem is actually two-fold. First, AGP FastWrite must be disabled in BIOS. The AGP FastWrite option does not properly write the texture data to the video card. Next, AMD-ATI has provided a HotFix for Catalyst and the Radeon HD 3000 Series drivers. You can get the HotFix here. This will update Catalyst and your drivers to v8.8. The HotFix also includes SmartGart for CCC, which provides information on the state of the AGP and PCI slots, and allows you to test them to make sure AGP FastWrite is off. Once v8.8 is installed and the PC is restarted, crank up the settings in the 3D menu and load up your game of choice!
This issue is also present in the Radeon HD 2000 Series cards, and the same steps may be taken to solve the problem.
Here’s a full description of the issue, to help diagnose if you are suffering from this problem:
- Broken textures that should be solid (i.e. A box that should be solid, but has transparent stripes.)
- Broken textures that display in color bands – most likely purple or green.
- Transparent or semi-transparent textures that tile as solid, with severe artifacting and discoloration.
- Text that displays garbled or text with textured backgrounds which appear garbled.
- Fullscreen images or framed images that appear “lens-flared.” The best way to describe this is if you imagine you have a picture, and in the top left corner you have a smaller copy of the picture, and another smaller copy of the picture in the top left corner of that picture. Many times, the copies are distorted in some way – whether stretched or discolored – but are clearly the same as the main image you are supposed to see.
I hope this helps at least one person, and it doesn’t take them long to find this post to get help. I worked on this issue for a couple of days before I found out what the problem was, and it was still trial and error before I found the final solution.



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