spraybottle
New Member
PC eye said:Are you running an eide or Serial ATA drive? On an ide drive there is a rectangular opening on the back of the drive with 6 small pins in the opening there. The small plastic cap has a metal contact on the inside that determines what the bios will see when it detects the drive and assigns an address to it. The operating system is installed to the master on the cable due to the bios looking there first to load it. Generally you have to use a pair of tweezers or a small pair of pliers to lightly grab ahold of it to pull out and move over to one of the other positions.
One thing that you haven't been able to try is going into the bios to check the agp/pci setting is correct. Clearing the cmos by removing the battery on the board for a few seconds and replacing it would set the board back to the factory defaults. That would also set the agp/pci to pci. You would then have to set the time and date followed by moving with the arrow key to the exit and save position to then press enter or press F10 for it to leave the bios and restart the system. But you would still need something onscreen after the cmos was cleared. If the card is good when tried in another case then try clearing the cmos to see if that gets something onscreen. Otherwise you are probably looking at a bad board rather then bad card. The other video card that is known good didn't work either.
I have a SATA drive. I have tried removing the cmos battery and putting it back in after like 30 min, but still nothing. It's really weird because now I'm guessing it is a faulty motherboard or something...
Well, now that I thought about it, what if my motherboard doesn't support the video card? It says nforce 4, and doesn't that mean it only works with nvdia based graphics cards? I mean, I have an ati XT850 XT.