Trystrom - It's possible that your video card is overheating, or broken. This can sometimes be fixed, but not always. If you are willing to spend a few dollars at a local computer/office supply store for a can of pressurized air, you can open your computer and use the pressurized air to forcefully blow all of the dust out of the video card cooling fan. Dust buildup frequently causes overheating in older cards, like you GeForce 6200. Also, you will want to use the real canned air product. A vacuum seems like it would work, but creates dangerous static electricity that can fry the fragile electrical systems in your computer. Good luck!
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Trystrom -
It's possible that your video card is overheating, or broken. This can sometimes be fixed, but not always. If you are willing to spend a few dollars at a local computer/office supply store for a can of pressurized air, you can open your computer and use the pressurized air to forcefully blow all of the dust out of the video card cooling fan. Dust buildup frequently causes overheating in older cards, like you GeForce 6200.
Also, you will want to use the real canned air product. A vacuum seems like it would work, but creates dangerous static electricity that can fry the fragile electrical systems in your computer.
Good luck!