Re: [Hampshire] Build woes

Top Page

Reply to this message
Author: Chris Malton
Date:  
To: Hampshire LUG Discussion List
Subject: Re: [Hampshire] Build woes
Hi Rob,

I've had several BIOSes fail to pick up removal of a PCIe card (or it
assumes you know best), and therefore doesn't both flipping the setting
back.

It may be worth reinstalling the card, flipping the setting, verifying
you have onboard output, and then removing the card.

Regards,

Chris

On 06/10/12 17:20, Rob Malpass wrote:
>
> Hi all
>
> Question first -- details later: If you have a PC with a graphics card
> working fine, then remove the graphics card and connect your monitor
> to the onboard VGA -- shouldn't this work straightaway? I've heard
> of needing to disable onboard vga when fitting a new card but not
> having to re-enable onboard when removing a graphics card. Any ideas?
>
> I have a PC I'm trying to upgrade. For 4 years it's been running
> Hardy reasonably soundly but the graphics card configuration was a
> real pig (NVidia GeForce 8400GS made by Zotac). During upgrade, the
> new installer (latest Ubuntu) failed to detect the card and no matter
> how much faffing (yes I did backup xorg.conf) did the trick. Several
> other distros also failed to boot into a GUI and even when they booted
> from liveCD, the install process failed on 1^st boot from hdd.
>
> So, as I'm now utterly fed up with this graphics card and I don't need
> any demanding graphics from this box, I've removed the card and
> connected to the onboard VGA. Result: No video output at all despite
> everything else looking ok -- it makes a noise, I see hdd activity etc.
>
> Have I forgotten anything ? It's been a while since I've done any
> "surgery" on a PC.
>
> Cheers
>
> Rob
>
>
>


--
Please post to: Hampshire@???
Web Interface: https://mailman.lug.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/hampshire
LUG URL: http://www.hantslug.org.uk
--------------------------------------------------------------