(11-18-2017, 02:42 PM)Sharky!!! Wrote: It is connected to the internal videocard, not the GT 1030, yeah.
Well there's your problem. If there's a dedicated card, I think it's likely it won't display anything on the internal card. What happens if you remove the GT 1030 and boot?
(11-18-2017, 02:42 PM)Sharky!!! Wrote: It is connected to the internal videocard, not the GT 1030, yeah.
Well there's your problem. If there's a dedicated card, I think it's likely it won't display anything on the internal card. What happens if you remove the GT 1030 and boot?
1) Nothing.
2) I just connected it to the graphics card. Oddly it gives the very same issue.
Posts: 2,798
Threads: 165
Joined: Nov 2008
Staff roles: Moderator
VGA to HDMI cables rarely work as they should. I had to refund 7 out of 10 customers and I ceased selling it. Either try a different adapter or change the monitor to something more modern. DVIs and HDMIs are a standard nowdays even in low end screens.
Furthermore, DVI to VGA adapters like this one tend to work better.
Something I remember from the first time I had to deal with a fresh install on a PC that had both an internal and a dedicated graphics card is that I needed to actually install the geforce experience drivers before it displayed anything.
Hop into your bios to see if there are any configs relating to the default video device and try hooking it up with your internal one first - the video connector coming out of your motherboard. Once you have installed the drivers from their site, you should be able to change back.
From the way you describe it though - are you sure the PC is even posting? Do you hear the windows welcome sound as the thing loads?
--------------
PSA: If you have been having stutter/FPS lag on Disco where it does not run as smoothly as other games, please look at the fix here: https://discoverygc.com/forums/showthrea...pid2306502
----------
(11-19-2017, 08:16 AM)sindroms Wrote: Something I remember from the first time I had to deal with a fresh install on a PC that had both an internal and a dedicated graphics card is that I needed to actually install the geforce experience drivers before it displayed anything.
Hop into your bios to see if there are any configs relating to the default video device and try hooking it up with your internal one first - the video connector coming out of your motherboard. Once you have installed the drivers from their site, you should be able to change back.
From the way you describe it though - are you sure the PC is even posting? Do you hear the windows welcome sound as the thing loads?
The PC is brand new, it has nothing on it. No Windows, No data. The PC is starting, but the Monitor refuses to.
As for @Mickk . I had the experience to see my Video Card burned a few years back, when I merged a Pentium 4 processor (current processor) with an Nvidia 8800 GT. I couldn't find the reason for it, but I don't want to risk that again. Thanks for trying to help.
EDIT: Also my old Graphics Card is incredibly outdated.
Does your PC even post?
Does turning it on give you a ''beep''?
Is your PC beeper even installed on your machine so you can diagnose any issues?
--------------
PSA: If you have been having stutter/FPS lag on Disco where it does not run as smoothly as other games, please look at the fix here: https://discoverygc.com/forums/showthrea...pid2306502
----------