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- Re: Graphics card causing motherboard to cut out
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01-08-2022 03:56 AM
i bought a z420 motherboard and a e5 2670 to go into the board. when i try to boot it up without a graphics card it powers the board. but when i have my r7 260x installed it does not. at first i thought it was becasue of my 400w power supply so upgraded it to a 650w but still to no avail. im thinking it could be a bios thing but im not sure
01-08-2022 04:40 AM - edited 01-08-2022 04:56 AM
I had similar problem on Z400. Make sure you do NOT have "compute" enabled in the PCI express BIOS setup for any of the slots. The last manual here mentions putting the graphics card in the "primary" graphics slot. I think that is the one closest to the CPU. That 650 watt power supply is more than sufficient. I had to mod the power cables to use a standard ATX power supply on my Z400s
There is a recent BIOS update (2019)
https://support.hp.com/us-en/drivers/selfservice/hp-z420-workstation/5225033
[edit] I just re-read your post. That motherboard does not have on-board graphics so that r7 is the only graphics card you have? Do you have another graphics card even an old PCI card you can try? Even if both PCIe slots were set to "compute" the motherboard should still power up. If it is not powering up with the card inserted then there is some other problem.
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01-08-2022 05:00 AM - edited 01-08-2022 05:12 AM
I think you posted before I finished editing my reply.
Does the motherboard power up when the r7 card is installed?
Have you got another card you can try?
My symptom was the z400 powered up but there was no display until I managed to remove the "compute" from the PCI express settings. Even a CMOS reset did not remove the "compute"
SANITY CHECK: Is the 6 pin PCIe power cable connected to the r7 card?
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01-08-2022 05:16 AM - last edited on 01-08-2022 06:12 AM by MayS
this is what happened when i tried to boot it with the gpu installed
[content removed]
as i said before am i able to access the bios without a screen with just a keyboard and change what i need without a screen
yes the 6 pin is connected
01-08-2022 05:40 AM
hi
maybe you can answer this question, @BeemerBiker @ljtsge I have a doubt
The graphics card, and can only be used with a bios type uefy?
and the motherboard, does it support the bios Uefi?
if not, it could explain your problem
and this
Supports:
● PCIe Gen3 (PCIe3) bus speeds; can support two PCIe Gen3 graphics cards in
PCIe3 x16 slots
● Up to 225 W graphics or compute card in the primary graphics slot (600 W PSU)
● Up to 75 W graphics in primary slot (400 W PSU)
● A second graphics card in the second PCIe3 x16 slot
● Third and fourth 2D graphics cards in additional PCIe2 slots
● Combined power consumption of all cards not to exceed 270 W (subject to overall
system power limitations and configuration restrictions) (600 W PSU)
● Combined power consumption of all cards not to exceed 75 W (subject to overall
system power limitations and configuration restrictions) (400 W PSU
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01-08-2022 05:43 AM
I suspect there is some other problem but there a few things yet to be tried.
1 - Look carefully at the socket to ensure the r7 is properly seated.
2 - try the other graphics slot
I just went over to eBay and looked at a Z420 motherboard. It appears the x4 slots have an open back side. If so you can try another of the x4 slots even though your r7 is a full x16 length. Just make sure the extra connectors that extend out the back of the socket do not touch any metal parts on the motherboard.
My Z400 did not have open backside x4 sockets so I had to use an x1 to x16 "riser" adapter to get the video to work.
I suspect the problem is not the bios as my system powered up just fine and yours is shutting down.
Can you borrow another video board even an old pci type for testing?
Thank you for using HP products and posting to the community.
I am a community volunteer and do not work for HP. If you find
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problem please mark this as a solution so others can find it
01-08-2022 05:51 AM
@ljtsge wrote:update
my motherboard is now cutting off without the gpu plugged in
Not good
Anytime you insert or remove a PCIe card, memory stick, etc be sure the system is turned off using the switch at the back or unplugged from wall if no switch.
Questions for my own curiosity
1 - How did you get that video on Youtube to be stabalized? The few that I post you can tell I am shaking / cannot hold the camera perfectly still.
2 - did you use an HP 600watt or use the adapters as described here ?
Thank you for using HP products and posting to the community.
I am a community volunteer and do not work for HP. If you find
this post useful click the Yes button. If I helped solve your
problem please mark this as a solution so others can find it