Graphics Card/ PCI-E Slot Issue On Boot-up

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  1. Posts : 24
    Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
       #1

    Graphics Card/ PCI-E Slot Issue On Boot-up


    Hello,

    Today I put my computer to sleep and returned about 30 minutes later to start it back up. My computer's power light and fans came on and tried to start up repeatedly but after the computer tried around five times, it made a long beep followed by two short beeps. I looked up the type of issue those beeps meant for my motherboard and it was a video error. I found that when removing my GeForce 8800 GT from my PCI-E slot and plugging my monitor directly into the integrated graphics card everything works fine. It booted up and had to reinstall the new drivers for the GeForce 1650 (Integrated), but everything worked fine. I figured that meant my graphics card or RAM was broken, so I took it to my closest computer repair store. They tested the power supply to see if it was supplying enough power to the card and it passed. They also tested the RAM and the graphics card to see if they were broken, but they both passed. They told me to either leave it with them for a week or just use the integrated graphics (which of course stubborn me chose to take it home for now). I am willing to leave it at the store if necessary and I also have a compatible motherboard in mind that I could buy if that will solve the issue, but before I make any actions I figured I would take advantage of these forums and hold out on using the different card for a week or so.

    The type of computer I have is a Gateway GT5662 and it is less than two years old. I upgraded the graphics card with the GeForce 8800 GT, the sound card, and the power supply to a 500 watt. If anyone has had a problem like this or knows how I can diagnose my issue please help! It is much appreciated! I miss being able to have my computer screen on my monitor AND my TV
      My Computer


  2. NoN
    Posts : 4,166
    Windows 7 Professional SP1 - x64 [Non-UEFI Boot]
       #2

    Menutra said:
    Hello,

    Today I put my computer to sleep and returned about 30 minutes later to start it back up. My computer's power light and fans came on and tried to start up repeatedly but after the computer tried around five times, it made a long beep followed by two short beeps. I looked up the type of issue those beeps meant for my motherboard and it was a video error. I found that when removing my GeForce 8800 GT from my PCI-E slot and plugging my monitor directly into the integrated graphics card everything works fine. It booted up and had to reinstall the new drivers for the GeForce 1650 (Integrated), but everything worked fine. I figured that meant my graphics card or RAM was broken, so I took it to my closest computer repair store. They tested the power supply to see if it was supplying enough power to the card and it passed. They also tested the RAM and the graphics card to see if they were broken, but they both passed. They told me to either leave it with them for a week or just use the integrated graphics (which of course stubborn me chose to take it home for now). I am willing to leave it at the store if necessary and I also have a compatible motherboard in mind that I could buy if that will solve the issue, but before I make any actions I figured I would take advantage of these forums and hold out on using the different card for a week or so.

    The type of computer I have is a Gateway GT5662 and it is less than two years old. I upgraded the graphics card with the GeForce 8800 GT, the sound card, and the power supply to a 500 watt. If anyone has had a problem like this or knows how I can diagnose my issue please help! It is much appreciated! I miss being able to have my computer screen on my monitor AND my TV
    Could you have a look if in the Power Plan Management, the PCI-E slots are not set to lower powering?
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Graphics Card/ PCI-E Slot Issue On Boot-up-capture.png  
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 24
    Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Under advanced power settings>PCI-Express>Link State Power Management> it is set to Moderate power savings.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 24
    Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Would flashing the BIOS do anything to help? I'm not exactly sure how to properly do it though so I would need guidance. Either that or reinstalling the driver for the motherboard? I looked on Gateway's website and they have 1 driver for the MB, but I bought the computer as windows Vista 32-bit and since then have installed Windows 7 64-bit and I'm unsure if the driver will still be the same..
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  5. Posts : 72,036
    64-bit Windows 11 Pro for Workstations
       #5

    Hello Menutra,


    Here are some items to check:
    • Double check to make sure that you have your BIOS set to use the PCI-E slot and not the integrated video.
    • Check to make sure that you have the correct PCI-E slot selected in BIOS if you have this option.
    • Did you uninstall and delete your previous video driver before installing the new graphics card and it's driver?
    • Try another PCI-E slot if available.
    • Try another video port on the graphics card.
    • Did you do a clean install to Windows 7, or did a inplace upgrade from Vista? You might consider a clean install to see if it was a upgrade issue.

    Hope this helps,
    Shawn
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 24
    Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #6

    Hey Shawn thanks for the help,

    On the motherboard I am using I only have one PCI-E slot, and yes I checked the BIOS to make sure that the PCI-E is the first thing the computer tries to use. The upgrade from windows vista to windows 7 was a clean install and I am willing to just wipe the HD and reinstall windows 7 if that would work, I just am unsure if that will fix anything. The computer refuses to boot as long as the graphics card is in the PCI-E slot and only will boot with the integrated monitor if it is removed.. I tried uninstalling the drivers for the integrated card and then installing the software for the 8800 GT after wards, but again it wont boot.

    Is it even possible to have a PCI-E slot randomly just stop working? I tried changing the power settings to the PCI-E slot also in the power management and still no boot..

    I'm determined to figure this out I'm just slowly running out of things to try XD

    Menutra
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 72,036
    64-bit Windows 11 Pro for Workstations
       #7

    Do you have a friend that you can test your graphics card in their computer, and try their graphics card in your computer?

    This way you can see if you may just have a bad graphics card if it doesn't work in his/her system either, or possiblly a bad PCI-E slot if his/her graphics card will not work in yours with your graphics card working in his/her system.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 24
    Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #8

    I did try that and my graphics card is working fine along with theirs not working in my PCI-E slot.. So I'm not sure if the issue is simply software or if it is the actual PCI-E slot that is broken. Is there a way to know the difference?
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 72,036
    64-bit Windows 11 Pro for Workstations
       #9

    You would have to have your motherboard tested by a shop to see if the PCI-E slot is functional or not.

    If you uninstalled your video drivers and installed the correct drivers for their card, and it still did not work, then it sounds like it may be bad.

    Set your BIOS to factory defaults, change BIOS settings to use only the PCI-E slot and to disable the integrated videos, then try the graphics card one more time to make sure that there wasn't some other BIOS setting that may have been set incorrectly by mistake.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 24
    Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #10

    Okay then after work today I will do that and if it doesn't work I'll leave it at the shop. Would you recommend flashing the BIOS? or just resetting it to factory defaults? When I boot up I hit f2 to go into the BIOS options and I've tried setting it to "Fail-safe" settings but I can't seem to find how to reset it to factory defaults.. or IS that setting it to the defaults I want?
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