Video signal lost and pc shuts down on Win 7 64 bit with NVIDIA GT 320

simorame

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In the last few days I have experienced a serious problem that is preventing me to use my desktop pc. The computer is an Acer Aspire AX3900 running Windows 7 64 bit with Intel i5 processor, 6 Gb RAM and NVIDIA GT 320 graphic card.

This is what has been happening: when I boot the pc, both in normal and safe mode, everything works fine for a few minutes, then the monitor suddenly loses the video signal and there is no way to get it back without rebooting. Sometimes the pc shuts down too after the video signal loss, sometimes not. I have Teamviewer installed on my desktop pc and connecting with a notebook I have realized that the pc is still working fine when it did not shut down after the video signal loss. The longer I leave the pc switched off, the longer the video signal stays on, but never more than 5-6 minutes.

I have googled a lot to try to figure out what the problem may be and find a solution, but with no luck so far. However, I reckon the problem could have something to do with a recent driver update of my GT 320 card. Indeed, last Sunday I installed the trial version of Adobe CS 5.5 Master Collection and when running Premiere Pro for the first time it asked me to update the graphic card driver in order to use CUDA. I did so via Nvidia website and installed the driver that was suggested: the 270.61 version. The update was, or appeared to be, successful but after rebooting the pc the problem with the video signal started.

There was no way to use a restore point, because none was old enough, so I have installed an older version of the grdriver but it did not solve the problem. My last attempt, this morning, was to install the latest version of the graphic card driver - the 275.33 version - but the installation fails. I have also tried to perform a fresh install of the driver, following some advice found online, but whenever I try to perform all the operations suggested the pc shuts down.

I'm quite clueless and frustrated now, and before I do anything else I am wondering if anyone can give some advice. Thanks in advance.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 64 bitIntel i56 GBNVIDIA GT 320
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Acer Aspire AX3900
OS
Windows 7 64 bit
CPU
Intel i5
Memory
6 GB
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA GT 320
In the last few days I have experienced a serious problem that is preventing me to use my desktop pc. The computer is an Acer Aspire AX3900 running Windows 7 64 bit with Intel i5 processor, 6 Gb RAM and NVIDIA GT 320 graphic card.

This is what has been happening: when I boot the pc, both in normal and safe mode, everything works fine for a few minutes, then the monitor suddenly loses the video signal and there is no way to get it back without rebooting. Sometimes the pc shuts down too after the video signal loss, sometimes not. I have Teamviewer installed on my desktop pc and connecting with a notebook I have realized that the pc is still working fine when it did not shut down after the video signal loss. The longer I leave the pc switched off, the longer the video signal stays on, but never more than 5-6 minutes.

I have googled a lot to try to figure out what the problem may be and find a solution, but with no luck so far. However, I reckon the problem could have something to do with a recent driver update of my GT 320 card. Indeed, last Sunday I installed the trial version of Adobe CS 5.5 Master Collection and when running Premiere Pro for the first time it asked me to update the graphic card driver in order to use CUDA. I did so via Nvidia website and installed the driver that was suggested: the 270.61 version. The update was, or appeared to be, successful but after rebooting the pc the problem with the video signal started.

There was no way to use a restore point, because none was old enough, so I have installed an older version of the grdriver but it did not solve the problem. My last attempt, this morning, was to install the latest version of the graphic card driver - the 275.33 version - but the installation fails. I have also tried to perform a fresh install of the driver, following some advice found online, but whenever I try to perform all the operations suggested the pc shuts down.

I'm quite clueless and frustrated now, and before I do anything else I am wondering if anyone can give some advice. Thanks in advance.

Here's what to do, boot the pc up, and go to device manager, find your graphics card and uninstall (if it let's you delete the old driver then do it), reboot and let the driver install on it's own. Now after that's done, confirm the driver works and keeps the display on, if it works then update your graphics driver using the geforce drivers(not the cuda), and restart. Hopefully it should be sorted
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1Intel Q6600 @ 2.6Ghz4Gb DDR2 Corsair Dominator @ 800Mhz 5-5-5-15EVGA 560 GTX SC FTW 1GB
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
CPU
Intel Q6600 @ 2.6Ghz
Motherboard
Evga NF78-CK-132-A 3-Way SLI
Memory
4Gb DDR2 Corsair Dominator @ 800Mhz 5-5-5-15
Graphics Card(s)
EVGA 560 GTX SC FTW 1GB
Sound Card
Realtek HD 7.1 Audio, Plantronics GameCom780 7.1 Headset
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell S2409W
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
SanDisk SDSSDHII-120G-G25 120GB SSD
Samsung 7200RPM 750Gb SATA
Samsung 850 EVO 120GB SSD
Western Digital Green 1TB 7200RPM
PSU
Xigmatek 750W Quad sli quad core 80% eff
Case
Antec 900 Gaming Case
Cooling
Zalman CNPS9700-NT NVIDIA Tritium
Keyboard
Logitech generic keyboard, MS wireless keyboard
Mouse
Razor Lachesis Banshee V2 Blue, 4000DPI, MS wireless mouse
Internet Speed
152Mb Virgin Media Fibre Optic
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Google Chrome
Other Info
Wireless Gaming Receiver for Windows, Wireless Xbox 360 Pad
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