Moderator: Andrew
yulog wrote:If i remove a video card from my desktop and put the same back in(the only difference will be the original card came with 512mb this new one has a gig) but everything else is the same , should i be able to just pull one out pop the other in and thats it the display should go back on . I should'nt have to download drivers should i? they should already be there from the original card.I'm taking it as this should be like a light bulb replacement in this case because i bought the same card. Rick or any tech savy people can you let me know if i'm correct.........thanks
No, you shouldn't have to go into safe mode. However you might have to start in VGA compat mode if you didn't go into your display settings and change them to Standard Display Adapter prior to shutting down and replacing the card. If this is the case and your system isn't detecting the change for whatever reason then it's still trying to load the drivers and settings for the card you pulled. As Slucero mentioneda PSU situation may be occurring here but that would only happen if you were upgrading from the card you had. If you downgraded and the only difference is the amount of RAM onboard, and the card you pulled didn't require its own power, then that's not the problem.yulog wrote:so are you all in agreement that i dont have to go to "safe mode" that after replacing the card and turning the computer on i can just go to the nvidea site and download the drivers?....thanks for all the imput.
My bad... Somehow I had the cards backward thinking he was replacing the 1 GB card. As for power requirements... Nope not on this one. Neither of the 240 corm factors require additional power: the GDDR 3 nor the GDDR 5.slucero wrote:JRNYMAN.. he's going from a 512mb to a card with 1GB mem... I'm positive that's gonna require more voltage..
Yulog can you post:
the make and model numbers of both the cards (Nvidia, ATI, etc)
The OS you are using (Win7, Vista, etc)
I just re-read your original post as well as this one and jsut to make sure I understand you correctly, the card that's being replaced, the 512 MB card, is dead correct? And you are replacing it with the 1 GB card but after removing the 512 card and installing the 1 GB card you still have no display. Is this correct? If so, the problem is leaning more toward a motherboard issue than a display issue.yulog wrote:dell 531 with win7 the card thats in the computer now thats dead is a galaxy geforce gt240 512mb
the new card is the exact same card with 1gb.
JRNYMAN wrote:I just re-read your original post as well as this one and jsut to make sure I understand you correctly, the card that's being replaced, the 512 MB card, is dead correct? And you are replacing it with the 1 GB card but after removing the 512 card and installing the 1 GB card you still have no display. Is this correct? If so, the problem is leaning more toward a motherboard issue than a display issue.yulog wrote:dell 531 with win7 the card thats in the computer now thats dead is a galaxy geforce gt240 512mb
the new card is the exact same card with 1gb.
yulog wrote:So, i got this card today and just as i thought/hoped, all i had to do was switch the cards out physically, turn on the computer....windows seven started downloading drivers automatically for several things, when they completed i took the disc that came with the new card and put it into the computer to download the display drivers and got a message stating restart your computer before trying this , which i did and when i restarted the computer everything was back to normal. i didn't have to do anything else , this was just a physical swap and thats all, that couldn't have gone any smoother.
Rick wrote:yulog wrote:So, i got this card today and just as i thought/hoped, all i had to do was switch the cards out physically, turn on the computer....windows seven started downloading drivers automatically for several things, when they completed i took the disc that came with the new card and put it into the computer to download the display drivers and got a message stating restart your computer before trying this , which i did and when i restarted the computer everything was back to normal. i didn't have to do anything else , this was just a physical swap and thats all, that couldn't have gone any smoother.
Good to hear, Yulog. Windows 7 rocks.
Return to Snowmobiles For The Sahara
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests