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It's possible your new card may be bad. Remove the new card from the server and try to restart. If it starts, get a new AGP card, If not, make sure the new card is fully seated in the slot and no and your top is replaced back fully. (In case you have intrusion detection enabled.)
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to access bios, press f1 immediately at boot, at 1 second intervals. you need to change the graphix adapter from "integrated agp" to "agp" or "pci", depending on your card. this should be under, "boot options>initial display device".
since you prolly have to do this with the integrated video hooked up (since it will be set to "internal vga" until changed) you are prolly up a creek without a paddle.
I have no idea why you would go from an agp to a pci. Agp has like 8x the banwidth of pci.I'll assume the agp slot went bad. If you can get into bios before you lose the display,change the display from agp to "init pci first",save & re-boot. See if that works,then when in windows install the drivers right away. If that doesn't work, during boot at the splash screen, press f8 & select "safe mode" with networking. This should let you get into windows so you can remove the old agp drivers,then re-boot into safe mode again & install the new drivers. Then re-boot normal & you should be ok. If not,that board has a big problem.
hey try the removing cards..... window 7 may took up it best when no such changes are around.. ! Gb or 2 RAm is enough to get run your Win 7 and sound card is noot required untill you have 4 or more speakers
HELLO THERE You may want to boot into bios and see if the video display is set to agp or pci and change it from their than save and reboot and if that does not help boot into the safe mode and uninstall the update and if needed reinstall the card,,, geforce has been having a problem with these updates and depending on your operating system it can be non compatable so, please try these solutions ok best regards michael
Hi there. Remember that if you are swapping from on-board graphics to a card you
have to go into the BIOS and tell the machine that the primary graphics
adapter is AGP/PCI Express. Plug the VGA cable into the on-board
graphics port, start the computer and enter the BIOS, tell the computer
to use the AGP/PCI card as primary, press F10, save the changes and
exit the bios. The computer will try and restart so let it boot to post and turn it off, then put in your card and try to boot again. Please post back if you need more help or advice.
as been have ssen in picture and specs of your mainboard you have a integratd vga vard and a agp slot. so solution may be this
with old integrated vga open bios program go to disply and choose pci input first. this enable you to boot from pci slot with a new vga save setting switch of computer put on new pci vga and try.
if no option to activate pci init first , sorry you can not boot any vga from pci , but only from agp slot.
Hi,
Click here to for your computer product specification.
ATI Radeon HD 2400 Pro is a PCIe and your computer is compatable only for PCI hope this helps, Thanks,Prem
First question: Are you sure you have a PCI card? there are several points here: Make sure you have the monitor connected to the correct output on your computer. (In this case to the output of the graphics card, not to your onboard output) If you have a PCI card set bios to PCI Setting it to AGP means the computer is looking for a graphics card in you AGP-slot on you motherboard.
I cannot help thinking, that you actually have a AGP card in a AGP slot and that you computer is not working on onboard, but on AGP. But you can check which graphics device is used, in display properties (right-click Desktop, Properties, Settings)
u back cmo pin on 1 2 only 23 resets it wont boot do u have onbord video out port use thatto see in bios then change it to pci express or agp whetevr uuse to boot off 1st in inet disply ok
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