No bios screen asrock z77 extreme6 |
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gathomas72
Newbie Joined: 04 Aug 2015 Location: st louis Status: Offline Points: 5 |
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Posted: 04 Aug 2015 at 6:01am |
I had a 3rd party pci-e video card installed Nvidia GTX 660 which was running fine. I wanted to do some maintenance and booted into the bios and assigned the on board video as the primary and then rebooted and now I can't get video even to get back into the bios.
Can anyone give me the keystroke map to attempt to reassign my gtx 660 back as the primary?
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Joe-912
Newbie Joined: 03 Aug 2015 Location: UK Status: Offline Points: 9 |
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Silly question but did you switch the cable to onboard connection?
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parsec
Moderator Group Joined: 04 May 2015 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 4996 |
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The cable check idea above is valid of course, as well as removing the cable from the video card if you have a cable connected to both video sources.
Another possibility is your monitor is not set to auto-switch its input, if you are using a different cable type (DVI vs HDMI for example) with the onboard video. We ALL have been burned by that once or twice. Otherwise, I suggest clearing the CMOS/BIOS and starting over. Your board has a Clear CMOS button on the IO panel, so you don't need to open the PC case. |
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gathomas72
Newbie Joined: 04 Aug 2015 Location: st louis Status: Offline Points: 5 |
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I'll have to attempt to force the display to find the source, but I did move the cable and removed the card just to be sure. It's going from DVI to DVI.
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gathomas72
Newbie Joined: 04 Aug 2015 Location: st louis Status: Offline Points: 5 |
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Alright so I went home last night and made sure the display found the correct source and and still nothing. Tried a second display via, DVI,VGA, and HDMI and nothing. Also I pressed the clear CMOS button and nothing.
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parsec
Moderator Group Joined: 04 May 2015 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 4996 |
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What CPU are you using with that board?
Try clearing the CMOS/BIOS with the jumper on the board, with the AC power removed from the PSU, etc. |
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Polymer
Newbie Joined: 07 Aug 2015 Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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I have a similar story. my motherboard is a z77 extreme4. I'm on windows 7, I disabled nvidia graphics and switched the dvi cable to the motherboard. It was Intel HD4000, and worked. I restarted my computer, but the screen was blank, though I could hear windows turning on. I reset my bios by taking out the battery, waiting a minute, and putting it back in (forgot there was a motherboard switch for this >_<). Now the computer doesn't boot, and the motherboard cycles through error codes, ending on A2. Thoughts on this would be great.
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Xaltar
Moderator Group Joined: 16 May 2015 Location: Europe Status: Online Points: 24653 |
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Taking out the battery for 1 min doesn't seem to be enough to clear CMOS on newer boards. Generally I take the battery out for 4 hours after having unplugged the power from the PC and holding down the power button to discharge the psu. Clear CMOS via jumper does not seem to be effective in most situations so I tend to recommend the battery route or both in combination.
Try the battery removal again and see if that helps.
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parsec
Moderator Group Joined: 04 May 2015 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 4996 |
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The A2 POST code is a SATA/drive issue, BUT as I recall with my Z77 Extreme4 board, when you are in the UEFI/BIOS, that is the code that is displayed, so not a problem. Since you cleared the CMOS, you would normally see a message about pressing DEL, etc, to enter the UEFI or it will timeout and boot. In your case I bet the board went to the UEFI UI because you removed the battery, but you still have the display problem, so could not tell. If your video card is still in the PC, the board thinks you are still using the video card, even without a cable connected to it. Try removing the video card, which will force the use of the integrated graphics, regardless of the setting of Primary Graphics Adapter in Northbridge Configuration. When (if) you get into the UEFI, check the setting of IGPU Multi-Monitor in Northbridge Configuration. The default is Enabled, which allows the IGPU and video card to operate at the same time. IMO, that setting can cause the problem you have when a video card is installed but no cable is connected to it. If you have the configuration again with the video card installed but all cables removed from it, set IGPU Multi-Monitor to Disabled when you set Primary Graphics Adapter to Onboard. |
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Polymer
Newbie Joined: 07 Aug 2015 Status: Offline Points: 2 |
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Removing the graphics card did the trick! A clarifying question.
Do you recommend IGPU-multi monitor be left disabled all the time, or only when I set the primary graphics adapter to onboard?
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