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Ok those are my ideas:
- Can you try this card in another PC, it could be a damage Video Card.
- I smell that you can have a compatibility issue, try to check if you main board chip-sets are compatible with this Video Card. Not sure how old is the main boards, it could be just a setting in the Bios. (do it before plugging the Video Card)
- Try the 400Watts +, maybe that is all you need.
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Hi!
I won't be able to test the card in any other computer, and it looks like there is a compatibility issue between the motherboard and the card itself plus not enough Watts from the PSU... so I'll have to change the PSU and then do some tricks I've seen in a youtube video where they explain how to make it work with his motherboard...
Thank you for your post!
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Simple Advice: NEVER help friends or family with their computers! ))
Honestly, it sounds like putting a new Power Supply in there will work fine.
The Wattage is the maximum output, not the amount of power FORCED into the system.
It will simply let the video card draw the extra power it needs. ($30-$60.00)
Considering your time and what the adapter costs. The power supply is probably the fastest simplest way to wrap this up.
I jumped into this thread because after Microsofts Update, a few programs started misbehaving and I had to install 7 different versions of my AMD RADEON driver to find a stable one... I was thinking I was not alone... LOL
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Joan Murt wrote: Do you think changing the power supply will do it?
Probably. Its likely drawing so much current at some voltage that its drooping too low. If it has a connector for the power supply to directly connect to it, you'll want to connect that too -- sometimes the traces on the motherboard just can't supply the kind of current a graphics card needs.
Even if you can get the card to work with his current power supply, you probably want to upgrade it. When he pushes the thing really hard, it could draw enough to cause the system to be unstable.
FYI, a graphic card's power supply specs are not because it needs that much power itself, its usually because PSUs of that class have sufficient amperage at some needed voltage. That's too fiddly to be worth the trouble, but if you know how to check it, its worth doing -- not all PSUs of a given wattage class have the same voltage/current capacities.
We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.
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Yes, after reading a lot of posts here I've become aware of how the PSU's work +/-.
Thank you for your recommendations!
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THE...PROBLEM...IS...THE...PSU. REPLACE...IT. PERIOD. END...THIS...PAINFUL...THREAD.
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As far as I've seen, the PSU is one of the problems.
It looks like the GPU needs at least 400W and the current PSU has only 300W. This is clear. Now, after some nice posts of other members I've known that there are other details that are important regarding the PSU capabilities which I'll double check at the shop this weekend.
But, there's always one but, this is 100% sure not the only problem.
After receiving some answers, I've seen that the motherboard installed in that computer has strange compatibility problems and that I'll be forced to update the BIOS from 7.13 to 7.16A which is the latest version from 2012 and even after doing that I'll have to make some extra steps to make it work.
Now, I'm curious: why you are shouting? why this was a painful thread?
This community is great to get help and again it has proven that it works wonderfully well to provide it...
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Probably I won't need that amount of Watts, but let's see what we can find at the shop this weekend.
Thank you!
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It's been a while since I have done a lot of work with graphics cards (and I don't have time to read all the posts, maybe this was already suggested.)
Have you tried putting the old graphics card in, firing up windows, and switching to the generic VGA driver (can you still do that with newer versions of Windows?) and then putting the new card in?
Wayne
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Nope, this will be the second set of problems (software ones) now the computer is not capable to go after the BIOS POST screen, therefore the OS drivers are still not the issue...
Thank you!
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This may help. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fkBTSlBW2oc[^]
This guy has the same problem as you and he's got a 600w PSU. It seems to me to be an incompatibility between the HP bios and the nvdia card.
modified 19-Jan-15 14:37pm.
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Without prolonging the thread too much I just wanted to mention that I have an nVidia card which requires an additional plug from the PSU; however if you do not plug in the extra plug, the system will still boot into windows just fine. You then get a friendly reminder/warning when you log in from the nVidia driver that the card cannot achieve peak performance without the extra power. But it works just fine for non-game stuff. So I'm putting my money on Paul's theory.
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Yes Paul!
You are the second one to post the same video here and it looks like there's an incompatibility issue here... I'll test it and see what would happen if I would select the PXE network boot in the BIOS settings as the default option, if that mitigates a little bit the issue and my inlaw is happy I'll be happy too, if he is not happy then it will be time to get another motherboard and some thermal paste for the processor...
Thank you for posting!
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No problem. I've had similar issues on an older HP mobo and nvidia card. One particular machine ground to a near halt after adding an nvidia GT8800 card. On the post screen you could watch it take a second or two to draw each individual character. Boot time was something like 30 minutes!!
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NIIIIIIIICE!
I understand it is difficult to keep everything updated, but... this kind of things are terrible.
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Wrote a new SQL Scalar function in SSMS toady, and just couldn't get it to do anything:
SELECT MyFunctionName(MyColumn) FROM MyTable Just underlined it in red and gave me
'MyFunctionName' is not a recognized built-in function name. And wouldn't run my query.
SELECT dbo.MyFunctionName(MyColumn) FROM MyTable Underlined it in red, said
Cannot find either column "dbo" ot the user-defined function or aggregate "dbo.MyFunctionName", or the name is ambiguous. But would run it, and returned null for all rows.
Spent an hour trawling google and playing with user execute permissions. Starting to pull my hair out.
Then I looked closely at the function and realised I didn't use the input parameter at all, and the function was rightly returning null...
I still hate SSMS and functions...but it works now...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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That is so reassuring to us mere mortals.
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Glad to be of help!
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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And you ask yourself why functions require schema name, but not stored procedures and views and tables...
Good question...
Skipper: We'll fix it.
Alex: Fix it? How you gonna fix this?
Skipper: Grit, spit and a whole lotta duct tape.
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And why it can't find them, but runs them happily...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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Oh...That one...The intellisense of SSMS is just does not exists...Even SQL is case-insensitive dbo and DBO are not the same for intellisense...So do not expect too much there...(It's one of the most reported bugs, but Microsoft do not plan to do anything with it for now)
Skipper: We'll fix it.
Alex: Fix it? How you gonna fix this?
Skipper: Grit, spit and a whole lotta duct tape.
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Kornfeld Eliyahu Peter wrote: intellisense of SSMS
Is completely pointless; I turn it off.
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Red-Gate's tool (SQL Prompt) is more flexible!
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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