HP pavilion special edition a6745f no display signal [closed]
monitor is not getting a signal from both the VGA and DVI ports. they are both on the same block. how do I remove them from the motherboard in order to replace them with new ones
motherboard vga
closed as too broad by Ramhound, Debra, music2myear, fixer1234, BillP3rd Jan 21 at 3:25
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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monitor is not getting a signal from both the VGA and DVI ports. they are both on the same block. how do I remove them from the motherboard in order to replace them with new ones
motherboard vga
closed as too broad by Ramhound, Debra, music2myear, fixer1234, BillP3rd Jan 21 at 3:25
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
the vga/dvi ports
– Kelly Salser-Conway
Jan 14 at 12:31
You haven't showed that the physical ports themselves are the problem. As Harrymc notes below, the problem is more likely the integrated graphics chip itself, which cannot be removed in any sort of reasonable way.
– music2myear
Jan 14 at 18:17
add a comment |
monitor is not getting a signal from both the VGA and DVI ports. they are both on the same block. how do I remove them from the motherboard in order to replace them with new ones
motherboard vga
monitor is not getting a signal from both the VGA and DVI ports. they are both on the same block. how do I remove them from the motherboard in order to replace them with new ones
motherboard vga
motherboard vga
asked Jan 14 at 12:02
Kelly Salser-ConwayKelly Salser-Conway
1
1
closed as too broad by Ramhound, Debra, music2myear, fixer1234, BillP3rd Jan 21 at 3:25
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as too broad by Ramhound, Debra, music2myear, fixer1234, BillP3rd Jan 21 at 3:25
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
the vga/dvi ports
– Kelly Salser-Conway
Jan 14 at 12:31
You haven't showed that the physical ports themselves are the problem. As Harrymc notes below, the problem is more likely the integrated graphics chip itself, which cannot be removed in any sort of reasonable way.
– music2myear
Jan 14 at 18:17
add a comment |
the vga/dvi ports
– Kelly Salser-Conway
Jan 14 at 12:31
You haven't showed that the physical ports themselves are the problem. As Harrymc notes below, the problem is more likely the integrated graphics chip itself, which cannot be removed in any sort of reasonable way.
– music2myear
Jan 14 at 18:17
the vga/dvi ports
– Kelly Salser-Conway
Jan 14 at 12:31
the vga/dvi ports
– Kelly Salser-Conway
Jan 14 at 12:31
You haven't showed that the physical ports themselves are the problem. As Harrymc notes below, the problem is more likely the integrated graphics chip itself, which cannot be removed in any sort of reasonable way.
– music2myear
Jan 14 at 18:17
You haven't showed that the physical ports themselves are the problem. As Harrymc notes below, the problem is more likely the integrated graphics chip itself, which cannot be removed in any sort of reasonable way.
– music2myear
Jan 14 at 18:17
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
It seems like your video adapter is dead.
The
HP Pavilion a6745f
has as video adapter the Integrated graphics using ATI Radeon™ HD 3200.
Unfortunately, integrated graphics adapters are soldered to the motherboard
and cannot be replaced except by a specialist.
I would really suggest replacing the motherboard (or the computer).
Downvoting an answer you don't like doesn't advance you anywhere.
– harrymc
Jan 14 at 13:33
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
It seems like your video adapter is dead.
The
HP Pavilion a6745f
has as video adapter the Integrated graphics using ATI Radeon™ HD 3200.
Unfortunately, integrated graphics adapters are soldered to the motherboard
and cannot be replaced except by a specialist.
I would really suggest replacing the motherboard (or the computer).
Downvoting an answer you don't like doesn't advance you anywhere.
– harrymc
Jan 14 at 13:33
add a comment |
It seems like your video adapter is dead.
The
HP Pavilion a6745f
has as video adapter the Integrated graphics using ATI Radeon™ HD 3200.
Unfortunately, integrated graphics adapters are soldered to the motherboard
and cannot be replaced except by a specialist.
I would really suggest replacing the motherboard (or the computer).
Downvoting an answer you don't like doesn't advance you anywhere.
– harrymc
Jan 14 at 13:33
add a comment |
It seems like your video adapter is dead.
The
HP Pavilion a6745f
has as video adapter the Integrated graphics using ATI Radeon™ HD 3200.
Unfortunately, integrated graphics adapters are soldered to the motherboard
and cannot be replaced except by a specialist.
I would really suggest replacing the motherboard (or the computer).
It seems like your video adapter is dead.
The
HP Pavilion a6745f
has as video adapter the Integrated graphics using ATI Radeon™ HD 3200.
Unfortunately, integrated graphics adapters are soldered to the motherboard
and cannot be replaced except by a specialist.
I would really suggest replacing the motherboard (or the computer).
edited Jan 14 at 18:16
music2myear
30.9k85598
30.9k85598
answered Jan 14 at 12:35
harrymcharrymc
256k14268568
256k14268568
Downvoting an answer you don't like doesn't advance you anywhere.
– harrymc
Jan 14 at 13:33
add a comment |
Downvoting an answer you don't like doesn't advance you anywhere.
– harrymc
Jan 14 at 13:33
Downvoting an answer you don't like doesn't advance you anywhere.
– harrymc
Jan 14 at 13:33
Downvoting an answer you don't like doesn't advance you anywhere.
– harrymc
Jan 14 at 13:33
add a comment |
the vga/dvi ports
– Kelly Salser-Conway
Jan 14 at 12:31
You haven't showed that the physical ports themselves are the problem. As Harrymc notes below, the problem is more likely the integrated graphics chip itself, which cannot be removed in any sort of reasonable way.
– music2myear
Jan 14 at 18:17