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no display on my Pc, graphics card had come loose!!

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  • Computers
  • Graphics Cards
  • Graphics
  • Displays
Last response: in Graphics & Displays
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June 3, 2013 7:42:55 AM

Ive just moved abroad, unpacked my desktop, an Advent computer approx 6 years old, set it up turned it on, boot screen appears logo of computer etc, and then on screen appears "no signal". Ive been inside the computer and discovered the graphics card has come loose, (this happened before, when i cleaned the inside of the pc) Ive now re-secured the graphics card in as it was before, of which there is no damage to the card, and same has occurred, everything is connected properly as it should be, it more or less boots up, then on screen the words appear " no signal" can you help!! so i can do this my self without the cost of myself taking it to engineer.
Many thanks. J.P

thank you all for yr responses im about to take a look inside now to make its in the correct slot and what brand of card it is bare with me guys :-))

More about : display graphics card loose

a b U Graphics card
June 3, 2013 7:45:15 AM

Is it on the right AV?
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a b U Graphics card
June 3, 2013 7:47:27 AM

Yeah I've heard this problem been tossed around more than once, you'll probably have to get a new gpu, dont worry, the radeon HD 5450 is only like £30 or something.., What is you're current Graphics card??
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June 3, 2013 8:07:46 AM

Although you say there is no damage, that may be true to a visual inspection but electronically the card may be damaged.

Alternatively, this symptom also occurs when the GFX card is not getting sufficient power. This can be due to a failing PSU or simply the PCIe power connector not being inserted correctly or at all. The reason a card can show a POST screen and then give no signal is that only minimal power is used to display a POST screen but as soon as the OS call is made by the BIOS the power draw of the GFX card increases significantly, and therefore beyond the available supply. The card shuts itself down to self-protect.
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June 3, 2013 10:17:19 AM

please excuse my ignorance guys psu, is this the processor? my friend was an engineer, who is obviously not available at the moment he went into the bios and fixed the issue, ive done the same earlier but could not see anything to my untrained eye that indicated an issue to the grafix card, anyways bare with me im gona take a look inside and get back to you all, many thanks ;-))

by the way the power supply unit works just fine ;-)
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June 3, 2013 10:32:35 AM

ok the card is defo in the right slot, and secured correctly, its an Nvidia 180-10413-0000-A01 gfx card
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June 3, 2013 10:39:19 AM

Flying-Q said:
Although you say there is no damage, that may be true to a visual inspection but electronically the card may be damaged.

Alternatively, this symptom also occurs when the GFX card is not getting sufficient power. This can be due to a failing PSU or simply the PCIe power connector not being inserted correctly or at all. The reason a card can show a POST screen and then give no signal is that only minimal power is used to display a POST screen but as soon as the OS call is made by the BIOS the power draw of the GFX card increases significantly, and therefore beyond the available supply. The card shuts itself down to self-protect.


everything is connected as i can see on the motherboard if the card as you say is not getting enough power how can i adjust this so as it functions properly. :-)
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June 3, 2013 10:57:40 AM

jp183 said:
please excuse my ignorance guys psu, is this the processor? my friend was an engineer, who is obviously not available at the moment he went into the bios and fixed the issue, ive done the same earlier but could not see anything to my untrained eye that indicated an issue to the grafix card, anyways bare with me im gona take a look inside and get back to you all, many thanks ;-))

by the way the power supply unit works just fine ;-)
My Highlighting.
OK there is a possibility that your mother board has onboard graphics and they are conflicting with your discrete card. This would have occurred when your discrete card came loose and the BIOS defaulted to onboard. If this is really your situation you will need to re-disable the onboard graphics so that the conflict disappears. Before any of us can advise you how to do that we need to know exactly what the motherboard is so we can give you a quick navigation to the right setting in the BIOS.

(PSU = Power Supply Unit, processor or Central Processing Unit = CPU)
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June 3, 2013 11:00:38 AM

Flying-Q said:
jp183 said:
please excuse my ignorance guys psu, is this the processor? my friend was an engineer, who is obviously not available at the moment he went into the bios and fixed the issue, ive done the same earlier but could not see anything to my untrained eye that indicated an issue to the grafix card, anyways bare with me im gona take a look inside and get back to you all, many thanks ;-))

by the way the power supply unit works just fine ;-)
My Highlighting.
OK there is a possibility that your mother board has onboard graphics and they are conflicting with your discrete card. This would have occurred when your discrete card came loose and the BIOS defaulted to onboard. If this is really your situation you will need to re-disable the onboard graphics so that the conflict disappears. Before any of us can advise you how to do that we need to know exactly what the motherboard is so we can give you a quick navigation to the right setting in the BIOS.

(PSU = Power Supply Unit, processor or Central Processing Unit = CPU)


thats great ill look now :-))
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June 3, 2013 11:09:32 AM

the brand of the motherboard is Foxconn CN15235
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a b U Graphics card
June 3, 2013 12:39:53 PM

So by that socket I'm guessing you have an intel core 2 duo or something along that socket family. Anyways, I don't think the problem would be the CPU but if it is upgrade to this one: http://www.intel.com/products/processor/core2quad/

That way if you want to get a really powerful graphics card, it wont bottleneck.
But if I were you I would just get the radeon HD 5450.

Kindest Regards,

Kieran
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a b U Graphics card
June 3, 2013 12:42:52 PM

Hit F2 whist on you're booting screen, If not then try the Del button you're keyboard (It means delete but it's ok you won't be deleting anything) :) 
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June 3, 2013 12:47:27 PM

KieranDavidW123 said:
Hit F2 whist on you're booting screen, If not then try the Del button you're keyboard (It means delete but it's ok you won't be deleting anything) :) 


ok ill switch on desktop now i pressed delete on boot screen before and accessed the setup screen.
im in set up screen now
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June 3, 2013 12:53:34 PM

ok ill switch on desktop now i pressed delete on boot screen before and accessed the setup screen.
im in set up screen now
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June 3, 2013 2:40:31 PM

if anyone can still guide me what to do in setup and or the bios, please post yr answer :-)) ill be back home from work around 6pm UK time. thanks for yr patience and time and adivce.
many thanks,
JP
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a b U Graphics card
June 4, 2013 9:38:30 AM

Try and find a tutorial on how to set you're PCI card over you're IGP (Integrated Graphics processor), Often there is also a setting in BIOS on newer boards that allows the user to set either a PCI card or AGP card as the primary video device. Make sure this is set to your video card.
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June 4, 2013 10:29:12 AM

thank again Kieran, im going to search for that and give it a go, ill let you know how i progress ;-)))

Kind regards,
JP
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a b U Graphics card
June 4, 2013 12:03:10 PM

Awesome! I hope you find a solution!

Kindest regards,

Kieran
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!