Question Dell Precision T3500 not loading Windows, black screen, red lines

silie96630

Junior Member
Apr 17, 2020
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I recently installed an SSD into my T3500 and a fresh copy of Windows. I removed my old HDD in case I needed to use my PC again if I messed something up. Everything worked flawlessly and after a week I was normally uing my PC when my screen turned black and sound stopped. I turned it off from the power button and after 15 seconds turned it on. It goes to the "start Windows normally" screen but there are red lines and patterns and when I press enter it just stays black. My T3500 isn't making any sounds, no signal codes and the GPU fan is spinning. All cables are plugged in properly into both the PC and the monitor. I added my old HDD disconnecting the SSD and I went into BIOS and changed from AHCI to the option it was on before and rebooted but the same thing happened. When going into system repair it shows an image but the screen is full off red lines (tried windows restore point but doesnt boot) . I tried removing the RAM sticks one by one however I get the same black screen after seeing the Windows logo screen. I don't understand why that happened and my suspicions are that the GPU is faulty but still has electrity passing through as the diagnostics code on the front of the PC do not light up. Has anyone had such a problem before and what was the issue? I doubt it's a DVI cable issue as it outputs image in Windows restore menu. The red lines are not in every menu. Thanks in advance, I'm really panicking.
Update: I ran Dell on board diagnostics full test and its telling me none of the hardware are broken. I dont know what to do.
 

DAPUNISHER

Super Moderator CPU Forum Mod and Elite Member
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Aug 22, 2001
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Full system specs are always helpful. Which version of windows too.

That said, your guess that it is a bad graphics card, is a good first guess. Red lines when in the recovery environment points to it as the culprit. If you have IGP on the CPU you are using, I would remove the vid card and try the iGPU. Otherwise, I would pursue whatever avenues you have available to procure another card for testing purposes.
 

silie96630

Junior Member
Apr 17, 2020
2
1
36
Full system specs are always helpful. Which version of windows too.

That said, your guess that it is a bad graphics card, is a good first guess. Red lines when in the recovery environment points to it as the culprit. If you have IGP on the CPU you are using, I would remove the vid card and try the iGPU. Otherwise, I would pursue whatever avenues you have available to procure another card for testing purposes.
It’s a Xeon X5650 so no IGPU but tge card is Quadro 4000
 
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DAPUNISHER

Super Moderator CPU Forum Mod and Elite Member
Super Moderator
Aug 22, 2001
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It’s a Xeon X5650 so no IGPU but tge card is Quadro 4000
If the card has never been serviced before, you could disassemble it and redo the thermal paste, and make sure it is dust free. Maybe it is just overheating, if you are very lucky. If that work station has another PCI-E graphics slot, you could install it there.