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- Re: Dedicated Nvidia graphics card blank screen

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10-04-2025 11:09 AM
I have a Pavilion Desktop 590-p0050 with 310W PS, Windows 11. I am trying to add a dedicated graphics card with Displayport to best use my new monitor. I tried an AMD Firepro W2100 recently with same results. I am now trying an Invidia GeForce K620.
I install the card, then connect the DP cable and monitor. When I power on I get no signal (black screen), and it does not appear the computer is booting (looking at the drive activity).
With the card installed, I try the HDMI cable to the onboard graphics port, same result, no boot, no signal. I cannot get to Bios settings with either connection when the card is installed.
If I remove the card and connect the monitor with HDMI to the onboard port, the computer boots normally.
Am I missing something on the installation process?
Note: I also tried a laptop to check the new monitor and DP cable, it worked fine. I also tried both graphics cards in A Win 10 Lenovo h50 50 90b7 with the same result.
Therefore I suspect I am missing a step, but my understanding was that the card should be auto detecting.
I am running the latest Bios on the HP, UEFI, AMI version F51 date 09/06/23
Any thoughts as to what to try would be greatly appreciated!
Chuck
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10-05-2025 05:05 AM
Welcome to our HP Community forum!
You've done a great job of testing -and your instincts are right: both the AMD FirePro W2100 and Nvidia Quadro K620 are low-power GPUs that should work perfectly fine with your Pavilion 590-p0050's 310-watt power supply. Each card typically draws only 30–45 watts, well within your PSU’s capacity.
However, your description (no boot, black screen with card installed) points to a UEFI/legacy BIOS compatibility issue, not a power problem.
What I Believe Is Happening:
Your Pavilion's BIOS is UEFI-only, whilst older workstation-class cards such as the W2100 and K620 often ship with legacy (non-UEFI) video BIOS firmware. When a system is set to UEFI boot mode only, it can fail to POST if the GPU doesn't support UEFI GOP (Graphics Output Protocol).
What You Can Try:
Enter BIOS (with GPU removed)
Press Esc → F10 at startup.
Go to Advanced → Boot Options (or Storage → Boot Mode).
Look for Legacy Support or CSM (Compatibility Support Module).
If available, enable Legacy Support.
Save changes, shut down, and reinstall the GPU.
Note: Some Pavilion BIOS versions hide this setting -HP gradually phased out Legacy support in newer BIOS revisions. If that’s the case, the card simply won’t initialize because the firmware expects a UEFI-compliant GPU.
Try a newer, fully UEFI-ready GPU
If the BIOS doesn't offer Legacy mode, choose a newer card that supports UEFI GOP, such as:Nvidia GT 1030 (GDDR5 version)
Nvidia GTX 1050 / 1050 Ti
AMD Radeon RX 6400
These will boot without issue in UEFI-only systems.
BIOS Reset (optional)
With power off, unplug the PC and hold the power button for 15 seconds.
Open the case, move the CMOS jumper to the clear position for 10 seconds, or temporarily remove the CMOS battery.
Restore and try again -sometimes the BIOS needs to "forget" a failed GPU initialization.
Summary:
PSU (310-watt) is sufficient for both GPUs.
Most likely cause: GPU firmware lacks UEFI GOP support.
Solution: Enable Legacy Support (if possible) or use a newer, UEFI-compatible graphics card.
Kind Regards,
NonSequitur777
10-05-2025 05:05 AM
Welcome to our HP Community forum!
You've done a great job of testing -and your instincts are right: both the AMD FirePro W2100 and Nvidia Quadro K620 are low-power GPUs that should work perfectly fine with your Pavilion 590-p0050's 310-watt power supply. Each card typically draws only 30–45 watts, well within your PSU’s capacity.
However, your description (no boot, black screen with card installed) points to a UEFI/legacy BIOS compatibility issue, not a power problem.
What I Believe Is Happening:
Your Pavilion's BIOS is UEFI-only, whilst older workstation-class cards such as the W2100 and K620 often ship with legacy (non-UEFI) video BIOS firmware. When a system is set to UEFI boot mode only, it can fail to POST if the GPU doesn't support UEFI GOP (Graphics Output Protocol).
What You Can Try:
Enter BIOS (with GPU removed)
Press Esc → F10 at startup.
Go to Advanced → Boot Options (or Storage → Boot Mode).
Look for Legacy Support or CSM (Compatibility Support Module).
If available, enable Legacy Support.
Save changes, shut down, and reinstall the GPU.
Note: Some Pavilion BIOS versions hide this setting -HP gradually phased out Legacy support in newer BIOS revisions. If that’s the case, the card simply won’t initialize because the firmware expects a UEFI-compliant GPU.
Try a newer, fully UEFI-ready GPU
If the BIOS doesn't offer Legacy mode, choose a newer card that supports UEFI GOP, such as:Nvidia GT 1030 (GDDR5 version)
Nvidia GTX 1050 / 1050 Ti
AMD Radeon RX 6400
These will boot without issue in UEFI-only systems.
BIOS Reset (optional)
With power off, unplug the PC and hold the power button for 15 seconds.
Open the case, move the CMOS jumper to the clear position for 10 seconds, or temporarily remove the CMOS battery.
Restore and try again -sometimes the BIOS needs to "forget" a failed GPU initialization.
Summary:
PSU (310-watt) is sufficient for both GPUs.
Most likely cause: GPU firmware lacks UEFI GOP support.
Solution: Enable Legacy Support (if possible) or use a newer, UEFI-compatible graphics card.
Kind Regards,
NonSequitur777
10-06-2025 10:38 AM
Thank You, This solved it. In order to turn on legacy support, I needed to disable secure boot. Is this a large issue? Should I consider optional cards with UEFI support so that Secure Boot can be on?
Or is the firmware on teh GPU updateable to support UEFI?
Thanks again, I am up and running.
Chuck
10-06-2025 11:27 AM - edited 10-06-2025 11:31 AM
I'm glad you are up and running!
I would leave things as they are right now, until you consider upgrading your power supply and your graphics card.
What can be done? -Well, please take a look at my most recent HP Pavilion 590-p0030 upgrade project.
Kind Regards,
NonSequitur777