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We prov ide you with the PCI-E graphics card Dell FH without any additional accessorieswhich you must place the low-profile card only into the appropriate slot. Dell SIL a Add2-n Pci-express Dvi-d Adapter Card PCI 0kh Kh eBayEnjoy a detai ledcrystal clear display on your DVI monitor and convince yourself of the high quality visual experience. This item may be a floor model or store return that has been used.Buyers may be subject to additional charges for customs clearance. Any international shipping and import charges are paid in part to Pitney Bowes Inc. Write your first review and help others with their purchase decision: You are covered by the eBay Money Back Guarantee if you receive an item that is not as described in the listing. Back to home page. Bei uns erhalten Sie z.
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Hi All,I have a Dell XPS 8500 - I have enabled intel multi display in the bios. The AMD Radeon HD 7570 has only two output ports, DVI-D and HDMI. I am running monitor 1 correctly via DVI-D(monitor) to DVI-D(Radeon board).
I would like to run my 2nd monitor via DVI-D (monitor) to the board's HDMI connection and have the cable to do so. Both monitors are recognized upon boot up and I have a dual display, but then Monitor 2 is seems to be recognized as VGA (with no display on the monitor's screen) upon complete boot into windows 7, see picture at this link:. If I remove monitor 1 and only boot up with Monitor 2 connected, windows does not recognize the monitor and I have a blank screen. I have tried another cable (dvi-d to hdmi) and the results are the same. What else can I do to trouble shoot this problem and determine why Windows is not recognizing the second monitor as a digital display? FWIW the 2nd monitor is a dell 2007WFP and the monitor is set utilize the DVI-d connection and goes into power save when Windows is completely booted up.
Thanks for any help or suggestions.Morgan. MGAllen wrote:Hi All,I have a Dell XPS 8500 - I have enabled intel multi display in the bios.You should only do that if you will use the integrated Intel GPU. From the rest of your description it appears you are not doing this.The AMD Radeon HD 7570 has only two output ports, DVI-D and HDMI. I am running monitor 1 correctly via DVI-D(monitor) to DVI-D(Radeon board).Clear so far, except it is a graphics card, not board.I would like to run my 2nd monitor via DVI-D (monitor) to the board's HDMI connection and have the cable to do so.What is 'the board' in this context?
My first assumption is it is the Radeon card (and not the motherboard) but please verify this.Both monitors are recognized upon boot up and I have a dual display, but then Monitor 2 is seems to be recognized as VGA (with no display on the monitor's screen) upon complete boot into windows 7, see picture at this link:.Seems like a driver issue, or the monitor not being recognized by the driver.If I remove monitor 1 and only boot up with Monitor 2 connected, windows does not recognize the monitor and I have a blank screen. I have tried another cable (dvi-d to hdmi) and the results are the same.This supports the monitor not being recognized by the driver (or card).What else can I do to trouble shoot this problem and determine why Windows is not recognizing the second monitor as a digital display?Try connecting the second monitor to the first port using the DVI-DVI cable, instead of the first monitor. Make sure the monitor works at all, and that it can be recognized by the card and driver.Jesper.
Hi All,Thanks for the replies.I have still been struggling with this for the last 3 weeks. I am about to give up. I apologize for not responding, I thought I would receive emails upon replies.I am about to request what other boards could I get for this system. I only use my machine for photo editing and a very little bit of video and I like to run dual monitors if possible. No gaming.I have 16GB RAM - 550power supply I7-Windows 7 64bit CS5 and LR4Thanks again for responding. Theswede wrote:MGAllen wrote:Hi All,I have a Dell XPS 8500 - I have enabled intel multi display in the bios.You should only do that if you will use the integrated Intel GPU. From the rest of your description it appears you are not doing this.Per Dell - I must have multi display enabled in the BIOS.
If I don't have it enabled, I don't even get my dual display that happens upon initial boot (before going into Windows). Per Dell's request I updated my BIOS to the latest for this machine and this had no effect on my problem.The AMD Radeon HD 7570 has only two output ports, DVI-D and HDMI. I am running monitor 1 correctly via DVI-D(monitor) to DVI-D(Radeon board).Clear so far, except it is a graphics card, not board.Thanks - I will improve my terminology.I would like to run my 2nd monitor via DVI-D (monitor) to the board's HDMI connection and have the cable to do so.What is 'the board' in this context? My first assumption is it is the Radeon card (and not the motherboard) but please verify this.You are correct - I am when I say board I do mean Radeon card. Again, I will work to improve my terminology.Both monitors are recognized upon boot up and I have a dual display, but then Monitor 2 is seems to be recognized as VGA (with no display on the monitor's screen) upon complete boot into windows 7, see picture at this link:.Seems like a driver issue, or the monitor not being recognized by the driver.I am lost at this point. I have done everything I can.
Dell did ask me to do an update, which failed when it came to the HDMI section of the update. I believe the HDMI port is bad on the Graphics card.If I remove monitor 1 and only boot up with Monitor 2 connected, windows does not recognize the monitor and I have a blank screen.
I have tried another cable (dvi-d to hdmi) and the results are the same.This supports the monitor not being recognized by the driver (or card).What else can I do to trouble shoot this problem and determine why Windows is not recognizing the second monitor as a digital display?Try connecting the second monitor to the first port using the DVI-DVI cable, instead of the first monitor. Make sure the monitor works at all, and that it can be recognized by the card and driver.Monitor does work. I am able to DVI-DVI my 'second' monitor.Thanks Jesper for responding.If you would like to see my progress with Dell:Jesper. MGAllen wrote: No It doesn't work at all - meaning upon boot up I don't get the initial dual display before booting into windows.There is no need for dual monitors before windows starts.
On my 3 monitors at work, the boot screen only shows on 1 monitor, then when Windows starts, all 3 become active. Same at home with my dual monitors: Only 1 shows the boot screen, but both work fine in Windows.The goal it to get the monitors working in Windows: What happens before Windows loads is not relevant. I recommend turning off the BIOS dual monitor setting if you haven't already, because it could be preventing Windows from doing its own proper handling of the 2 monitors.Also, a good forum for multi-monitor issues is: If you look through the forum, your question might even have already been answered. I have a Dell XPS 8500 - I have enabled intel multi display in the bios.You should only do that if you will use the integrated Intel GPU. From the rest of your description it appears you are not doing this.Per Dell - I must have multi display enabled in the BIOS.Per an underpaid help desk person in India following a badly written script, you mean.I don't mean this to sound disparaging. It's just really important to remember where the technical advice is coming from. The person providing advice is almost guaranteed to have very limited technical understanding of the underlying technology or (s)he'd be in a much more well paid position.If I don't have it enabled, I don't even get my dual display that happens upon initial boot (before going into Windows).That is irrelevant, and as mentioned by Eric can even cause you problems with getting both screens to work in Windows.Per Dell's request I updated my BIOS to the latest for this machine and this had no effect on my problem.That is always a good idea.
There can be issues in BIOS which cause problems.Thanks - I will improve my terminology.Most of the time it doesn't matter, but it can make it difficult to be certain what you have and have not tried. The more precise use of technical terms (provided they are understood) the more efficient the communication back and forth.Seems like a driver issue, or the monitor not being recognized by the driver.I am lost at this point. I have done everything I can.There are always things to try, even if the most dramatic is to wipe the drive and reinstall Windows from scratch.Dell did ask me to do an update, which failed when it came to the HDMI section of the update.You mean the Intel driver update? That refers to the on-motherboard HDMI port, not any HDMI port of the graphics card.I believe the HDMI port is bad on the Graphics card.That is possible, but unlikely.Monitor does work. I am able to DVI-DVI my 'second' monitor.That's a very good first step.
Does it also show up correctly in Windows as the monitor it is supposed to be? Can you update the monitor driver of the 'second' monitor when it is attached to the working DVI port?Jesper. Teseg wrote:Sounds like you have exhausted most options. The last question. Is your monitor older?
I found several thread like the one below:'My supervisor has found the problem. Interestingly new Intel drivers don't support some old DVI monitors. These 2 monitors I have mentioned above are all old monitors. And both of them are not supported and have compatibility problems with the driver. Now I have a new monitor which works perfect!' Hi Teseg,The monitor I am using for my second monitor is a Dell 2007WFP manufactured in July of 2006 so I guess in the tech world it is considered old.
But it is still a great monitor.I really would like a graphics card that would give me two DVI connections or one that would let me use the card and the VGA connection off the mother board. The way Dell sets up, it is either. Wow what a hassle. So dissapointed in this setup!
Theswede wrote:I have a Dell XPS 8500 - I have enabled intel multi display in the bios.You should only do that if you will use the integrated Intel GPU. From the rest of your description it appears you are not doing this.Per Dell - I must have multi display enabled in the BIOS.Per an underpaid help desk person in India following a badly written script, you mean.I don't mean this to sound disparaging. It's just really important to remember where the technical advice is coming from.
Eric Carlson wrote:MGAllen wrote:No It doesn't work at all - meaning upon boot up I don't get the initial dual display before booting into windows.There is no need for dual monitors before windows starts. On my 3 monitors at work, the boot screen only shows on 1 monitor, then when Windows starts, all 3 become active. Same at home with my dual monitors: Only 1 shows the boot screen, but both work fine in Windows.The goal it to get the monitors working in Windows: What happens before Windows loads is not relevant. I recommend turning off the BIOS dual monitor setting if you haven't already, because it could be preventing Windows from doing its own proper handling of the 2 monitors.Also, a good forum for multi-monitor issues is: If you look through the forum, your question might even have already been answered.Thanks Eric! I will do as suggested and read the links provided.
I will let you know! Thank you so much for reading and offering suggestions on my issue. I very much appreciate your efforts to help!Morgan.
I think you'll need to make sure Intel's multi-display mode is disabled in BIOS for starters (as that feature is probably for the integrated Intel chipset, which you don't use when you connect displays to the separate card you have. MGAllen wrote:theswede wrote:I have a Dell XPS 8500 - I have enabled intel multi display in the bios.You should only do that if you will use the integrated Intel GPU. From the rest of your description it appears you are not doing this.Per Dell - I must have multi display enabled in the BIOS.Per an underpaid help desk person in India following a badly written script, you mean.I don't mean this to sound disparaging. It's just really important to remember where the technical advice is coming from. MGAllen wrote:teseg wrote:Sounds like you have exhausted most options. The last question.
Is your monitor older? I found several thread like the one below:'My supervisor has found the problem. Interestingly new Intel drivers don't support some old DVI monitors. These 2 monitors I have mentioned above are all old monitors. And both of them are not supported and have compatibility problems with the driver.
Now I have a new monitor which works perfect!' Hi Teseg,The monitor I am using for my second monitor is a Dell 2007WFP manufactured in July of 2006 so I guess in the tech world it is considered old. But it is still a great monitor.I really would like a graphics card that would give me two DVI connections or one that would let me use the card and the VGA connection off the mother board. The way Dell sets up, it is either.
Wow what a hassle. So dissapointed in this setup!Don't believe everything you read, but this link is interesting:Maybe a solution?:All's I know is in spending just a couple minutes looking up this monitor it seems there are a whole host of electrical bugs that people have come across with it, even when brand new. Good luck sorting it out.
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