- Jun 8, 2005
- 9,673
- 583
- 126
Hey guys, I'm having issue getting a graphics card going in this Dell slim tower. Half-height card but an external Corsair 400 watt power supply. The graphics card is a 9800GT.
When I have no card installed (running integrated) everything works fine. When I put in the 9800 the Dell tells me to connect video to that card. Once I shut down, connect the video, and restart, the Dell gives a single "beep" with diagnostic lights 2 and 4 lit, indicating a graphics failure. Removing the graphics card fixes the issue.
At one point I even got into windows on integrated video and saw the 9800GT registered in device manager. That was only one time though. So far it wont let me into windows unless the card is removed. With the card is in it tells me to hook video up to the card to be able to boot but when I do I get the graphics card failure diagnosis.
Anyone have any idea what could be wrong? I don't have an extra video card to test. I can't RMA the card because I bought the card from a member here. This has been a complete disaster.
If anyone has any tips or tricks that could be tried let me know. And yes I connected the external power. The video card doesn't show any erratic behavior. The fan slows down quickly just as it should and that one bootup into windows makes me believe that the card is operational..
UPDATE: I combined the original Dell PSU and the new Corsair PSU. The Dell PSU ran all the original equipment, while the Corsair just ran the power supply. I hotwired the ATX cable to get the unit to turn on then I turned on the main computer. The video card fan started up slowly indicating that the card was getting PEG power (the fan just spins full-tilt if its not getting power).
There was still no video display. Looks like the power cable isn't the culprit. Rather, its either the video card or the motherboard. The video card looks like it suffered a rather hard punch to it during transit but there's no physical problems on the PCB other than the fact the PCB has a slight bend to it.
The next rub is I don't know where I can get a replacement and get refunded. Most only do exchanges. If the motherboard is still the issue then I'm out $100 on the useless graphics card on top of the $75 that I'm already out possibly do to UPS's screwup.
When I have no card installed (running integrated) everything works fine. When I put in the 9800 the Dell tells me to connect video to that card. Once I shut down, connect the video, and restart, the Dell gives a single "beep" with diagnostic lights 2 and 4 lit, indicating a graphics failure. Removing the graphics card fixes the issue.
At one point I even got into windows on integrated video and saw the 9800GT registered in device manager. That was only one time though. So far it wont let me into windows unless the card is removed. With the card is in it tells me to hook video up to the card to be able to boot but when I do I get the graphics card failure diagnosis.
Anyone have any idea what could be wrong? I don't have an extra video card to test. I can't RMA the card because I bought the card from a member here. This has been a complete disaster.
If anyone has any tips or tricks that could be tried let me know. And yes I connected the external power. The video card doesn't show any erratic behavior. The fan slows down quickly just as it should and that one bootup into windows makes me believe that the card is operational..
UPDATE: I combined the original Dell PSU and the new Corsair PSU. The Dell PSU ran all the original equipment, while the Corsair just ran the power supply. I hotwired the ATX cable to get the unit to turn on then I turned on the main computer. The video card fan started up slowly indicating that the card was getting PEG power (the fan just spins full-tilt if its not getting power).
There was still no video display. Looks like the power cable isn't the culprit. Rather, its either the video card or the motherboard. The video card looks like it suffered a rather hard punch to it during transit but there's no physical problems on the PCB other than the fact the PCB has a slight bend to it.
The next rub is I don't know where I can get a replacement and get refunded. Most only do exchanges. If the motherboard is still the issue then I'm out $100 on the useless graphics card on top of the $75 that I'm already out possibly do to UPS's screwup.
Last edited: