Set this to Onboard.

I have tried swapping slots in all possible combinations but the problem persists. mal @ Hardwood on Feb 14, 2019 9:07 AM. Thank you for your answer kind sir, In the bios, the setting Initiate Graphic Adapter [PEG] is indeed checked. In the "Before you begin" section of the instructions, is says that "if you have on-board, built-in graphics, enter the system's BIOS setup and look for a setting called 'Primary Display Adapter', or something similar, and set this to PCI. ... PCI-Express Graphics Device: It needs to be set on PEG. If there's only a BIOS setting to change the primary graphics adapter: Setting this to PCI won't completely disable the integrated graphics adapter. It allows you to select the type of Primary VGA in case of multiple video controllers. Dual Graphics PCI or PEG ??? Setting PCI-Express as primary adapter I have an XPS 8300, I recently noticed the clock wasn't keeping time so after doing some investigation concluded the CMOS battery was probably on its way out.

Actions . So I replaced it but the PC did not post and would only give one long beep and two short beeps which indicated a video problem. Configuration options: [Onboard] and [PCI Express].
Ryzen mainboards: selection of primary graphics device So since putting the host GPU in one of the chipset's PCIe slots appears to be the only way to use VFIO on Ryzen systems without the ACS patch for now, I was wondering how well a configuration like that is supported by the various mainboard vendors.

The default value of this feature is [PCI Express]. Initiate Graphic Adapter [PEG] Selects a graphics device as the primary boot device. This setup works fine except my integrated graphics adapter does all the …

With the PCI card only, it displays fine. If multimonitor support isn't desired, you can disable the Intel® 810 Chipset Family graphics driver (in software) in Device Manager. Like • Show 0 Likes 0. Save and restart. In the "Before you begin" section of the instructions, is says that "if you have on-board, built-in graphics, enter the system's BIOS setup and look for a setting called 'Primary Display Adapter', or something similar, and set this to PCI. I recently purchased PNY GEFORCE GT 730 NVIDIA graphics card, as suggested by a Dell rep, in order to be able to output HDMI to my Smart TV.

The integrated and dedicated graphics adapter are both enabled for improved connectivity since I need an extra HDMI port to connect my monitor and my TV at the same time. Therefore, if you only use a single graphics card, it is recommended that you set the Primary Graphics Adapter functionality to the proper configuration for your system (AGP for a single AGP card and PCI for a single PCI card). On the MSI 790FX-GD70 (BIOS v1.3), when I have one PCI and one PCI-E graphic cards slotted, and with "PCI" selected in BIOS "Primary Graphic's Adapter", it still boots up displayed with the PCI-E graphics card. The image is mirrored. Select Primary Graphics Adapter Hello, I have a integrated graphics adapter and a dedicated graphics adapter. PEG (PCI Express Graphics) -> generic PCI Express 16x slot (called PEG because only gfx cards need the 16x bandwith) The selection in the BIOS setup is for choosing the primary display adapter if you have more than one gfx card in your computer (with one PEG slot you can have one PCI Express gfx card and one PCI gfx card). But if you use multiple graphics cards, it is up to you which card you want as your primary display adapter. I recently purchased PNY GEFORCE GT 730 NVIDIA graphics card, as suggested by a Dell rep, in order to be able to output HDMI to my Smart TV. Instead, it will set it to work as the secondary adapter for multimonitor support.