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>Did you try the onboard video adapter (with and without the video card removed) to see if you are getting any signal on the monitor?
I tried it but only with no other card involved. I didn't want it to fail because of confusion and I couldn't see why the absence of a second card could help either way.
To be sure, I'm going to hook the monitor to another desktop, I'll know by 11:00 and another monitor could be in the mail by 11:03
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Are you positive you have the correct input source select for the monitor? I have an older 27" Asus monitor stashed away that at times switches itself from HDMI to analog D-15.
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I determined that rhe monitor was the problem because I got nothing when I connected it to my laptop and another computer. So I bought a new one and it did not solve the problem.
I have yet to try both the new and the old video cards in different slots but if the mobo or the slots are the problem, why did I get nothing when connected to other machines? Where do I go from here?
PS: I'm still not getting notified of replies, would you fix that for me please.
Thanks - rev
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Does the new Monitor work OK when connected to your laptop or another working computer?
It is possible that you had an issue that took out the motherboard, video card, and monitor.
Try the new monitor on some working computers to verify that it works. It should be under warranty if it does not.
Then try the new video card in a working computer with a known good monitor to verify that it works.
After that, try a known good video card in a different slot on the problem computer, with a known good monitor.
The notifications are being worked on. No estimate as to when they might be fixed.