Jump to content

a little more detail please?

 

have you tried with iGPU and it works?

QUOTE/TAG ME WHEN REPLYING

Spend As Much Time Writing Your Question As You Want Me To Spend Responding To It.

If I'm wrong, please point it out. I'm always learning & I won't bite.

 

Laptop:

Lenovo Yoga 7 Air: Ryzen 7840S, 32GiB DDR5

 

Desktop (Old but I never replaced it):

Delidded Core i7 4770K - GTX 1070 ROG Strix - 16GB DDR3 @2000Mhz

Link to post
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, Jamil367 said:

Yes i boot into bios with the i5 2500k

Firstoff, quote me when replying.

 

second, a 2500K is good, but I want the full specs.

 

GPU, CPU, RAM, PSU, Etc.

QUOTE/TAG ME WHEN REPLYING

Spend As Much Time Writing Your Question As You Want Me To Spend Responding To It.

If I'm wrong, please point it out. I'm always learning & I won't bite.

 

Laptop:

Lenovo Yoga 7 Air: Ryzen 7840S, 32GiB DDR5

 

Desktop (Old but I never replaced it):

Delidded Core i7 4770K - GTX 1070 ROG Strix - 16GB DDR3 @2000Mhz

Link to post
Share on other sites

I5 2500k

asus p8h61-i

4gb hyperx ddr3

500gb wd green hdd

Corsair vs450

silverstone sg13

6 minutes ago, RadiatingLight said:

Firstoff, quote me when replying.

 

second, a 2500K is good, but I want the full specs.

 

GPU, CPU, RAM, PSU, Etc.

 

SPECS:

i5 6400

Asus H110i-PLUS

Kingston 8GB RAM

HyperX 3K 120GB SSD

Western Digital Black 320GB HDD

Corsair RM550x

Fractal Design Nano S

Link to post
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Jamil367 said:

I5 2500k

asus p8h61-i

4gb hyperx ddr3

500gb wd green hdd

Corsair vs450

silverstone sg13

 

Well then, it seems like a definite video card issue.

 

try a different port on the video card, and make sure that all power connectors to the GPU are securely seated.

QUOTE/TAG ME WHEN REPLYING

Spend As Much Time Writing Your Question As You Want Me To Spend Responding To It.

If I'm wrong, please point it out. I'm always learning & I won't bite.

 

Laptop:

Lenovo Yoga 7 Air: Ryzen 7840S, 32GiB DDR5

 

Desktop (Old but I never replaced it):

Delidded Core i7 4770K - GTX 1070 ROG Strix - 16GB DDR3 @2000Mhz

Link to post
Share on other sites

What GPU are we talking about?

Is the power connected to it, if it requires additional power?

Is the GPU in the correct slot? Is it properly in it's slot?

Does the GPU work in any other slot, provided there are?

Did you try other display connectors on the GPU? Other HDMI port or other type of connection?

Can you try another GPU?

HAL9000: AMD Ryzen 9 3900x | Noctua NH-D15 chromax.black | 32 GB Corsair Vengeance LPX DDR4 3200 MHz | Asus X570 Prime Pro | ASUS TUF 3080 Ti | 1 TB Samsung 970 Evo Plus + 1 TB Crucial MX500 + 6 TB WD RED | Corsair HX1000 | be quiet Pure Base 500DX | LG 34UM95 34" 3440x1440

Hydrogen server: Intel i3-10100 | Cryorig M9i | 64 GB Crucial Ballistix 3200MHz DDR4 | Gigabyte B560M-DS3H | 33 TB of storage | Fractal Design Define R5 | unRAID 6.9.2

Carbon server: Fujitsu PRIMERGY RX100 S7p | Xeon E3-1230 v2 | 16 GB DDR3 ECC | 60 GB Corsair SSD & 250 GB Samsung 850 Pro | Intel i340-T4 | ESXi 6.5.1

Big Mac cluster: 2x Raspberry Pi 2 Model B | 1x Raspberry Pi 3 Model B | 2x Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+

Link to post
Share on other sites

Gtx 1050 ti doesnt require additional power

its mini its so no other slot

and havent got a displayport on hand

SPECS:

i5 6400

Asus H110i-PLUS

Kingston 8GB RAM

HyperX 3K 120GB SSD

Western Digital Black 320GB HDD

Corsair RM550x

Fractal Design Nano S

Link to post
Share on other sites

If your mobo (not your GPU!) has more than one video output port (DVI, VGA, DP, etc), what you can try to do is enable the iGPU in the BIOS, then make it so your PC first uses the iGPU when booting up into the BIOS (POST screen, setup, multi-boot, etc.). Then what you can do is make it so that your dedicated GPU handles all video output when your computer has booted into an OS. My computer uses this exact setup and it works fine.

Link to post
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, The Pixel Polygon said:

If your mobo (not your GPU!) has more than one video output port (DVI, VGA, DP, etc), what you can try to do is enable the iGPU in the BIOS, then make it so your PC first uses the iGPU when booting up into the BIOS (POST screen, setup, multi-boot, etc.). Then what you can do is make it so that your dedicated GPU handles all video output when your computer has booted into an OS. My computer uses this exact setup and it works fine.

Does it matter if its on auto

SPECS:

i5 6400

Asus H110i-PLUS

Kingston 8GB RAM

HyperX 3K 120GB SSD

Western Digital Black 320GB HDD

Corsair RM550x

Fractal Design Nano S

Link to post
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, Jamil367 said:

As in theres 3 options to boot in igpu, dedicated gpu and auto so it detect what output your using

Your primary output MUST be the iGPU in the BIOS. After the BIOS, the OS will handle all video output to your dedicated GPU. The BIOS should have an option such as "Init Display Output" or something similar.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Boot into Windows, set your main display to the monitor plugged via your external graphics card. If you can see Windows on this input, you're done. If you're having problems with other applications, you can disable the iGPU in Windows Device Manager. Leave the BIOS settings as is. 

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

×