Standard Monitor Stand

HP Hewlett Packard Standard Monitor Stand PA507A
HP Hewlett Packard Standard Monitor Stand PA507A $9.99
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HP Hewlett Packard Standard Monitor Stand PA507UT Brand New In Box
HP Hewlett Packard Standard Monitor Stand PA507UT Brand New In Box $18.99
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Standard LCD Monitor Stand 4 SQ Bolt Pattern
Standard LCD Monitor Stand 4 SQ Bolt Pattern $8.10
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3M MS100CG MONITOR STAND DRAWER only FOR USE W ADJUST MNTR STANDARD MS101 GREY
3M MS100CG MONITOR STAND DRAWER only FOR USE W ADJUST MNTR STANDARD MS101 GREY $30.61
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3M MS100CG MONITOR STAND DRAWER only FOR USE W ADJUST MNTR STANDARD MS101 GREY
3M MS100CG MONITOR STAND DRAWER only FOR USE W ADJUST MNTR STANDARD MS101 GREY $30.26
End Date: Friday Jun-15-2012 11:31:22 PDT
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Standard Monitor Stand
I have a Intel 82845g mobo and trying to install a nVidia GeForce FX5200 and only get a blank screen Pls help?

I have tried many things, but whenever I have the 5200 plugged into the mobo, I get a blank screen... the computer boots up, but the monitor sits in stand-by mode. I have removed the Intel drivers and running standard VGA, I have set the BIOS (before plugging video card in) to use the AGP first, and have tried the video card on another computer and it worked straight away... Now I am out of ideas.
Has anyone got any ideas that might be able to solve this issue?

Thanks
Yuley

It looks like you're following all the right steps, but still having problems. I'm not sure if this will help but you might want to try the following.

1. Make sure that the video card is properly seated all the way in the slot. I've seen cases where the card actually works, but due to the physical design of the motherboard and PC case, the card will not properly fit all the way in the slot and sticks up just enough to cause it to lose contact. It should be flush up against the slot when you put it in.

2. If the AGP card requires a separate power connector, make sure you plug it is before powering on the system.

3. I am assuming you have an AGP slot on your motherboard and the card is also AGP, but in the event it's actually a PCI video card (some integrated i845 chipsets don't even have AGP and only have slots for PCI add-in cards), then set the primary display to PCI in your BIOS.

4. Faulty AGP port. Highly unlikely, but it could happen.

5. Unlikely but check in your BIOS for a setting to disable onboard video. Most boards will autodetect once you put an add-in card in your AGP slot.

6. Even more unlikely since your system isn't that old, but check your motherboard manual and see if there is a jumper for onboard video and disable it.

7. Power supply may not be able to handle the video card requirements. If the card requires 250W and you have a 250W power supply, you still may want to upgrade higher depending on how many other added devices you have on your system. If you suspect this to be the case, remove any add-on USB devices that rely on your PC power supply for power (scanners, webcams, joysticks, etc) and see if you are able to power it on. Hook up only a mouse and keyboard at boot up and see if works.

Also, if you are getting a blank screen at boot up (meaning a total blank screen), then it isn't drivers that are causing the problem. Windows is not the problem and formatting or changing the software isn't going to fix anything.

When you power your PC on, the light on your monitor should activate or turn on if it is receiving any kind of signal at all. If you are getting no response at all from the monitor, then it is either connection related or a hardware related.

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Category: Monitors