Try asking a friend if you can swap your video card into their machine and boot in safe mode to see if it works.
Otherwise you can get a diagnostic board to see if your motherboard is damaged.
Check for something simple like this one
http://www.soyousa.com/products/proddesc.php?id=261
2007-01-03 16:00:26
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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potential furnish difficulty, open your workstation and verify your potential furnish watts, and seem at your radeon x800 gto's container and seem at its standards for W's on the potential furnish. evaluate additionally, do no longer overclock it using ATI's administration center, it's going to burn it quicker. it may additionally be your fan, yet in many situations isn't the issue. If it in basic terms occurs on WoW, it somewhat is in all probability the video card and not your different hardware. replace your drivers from ATI and verify on the administration center approximately your video card warmth on ATI overdrive, my video card is 50*c in standby as of night genuine now. My powersupply grew to become into vulnerable too, it somewhat is too vulnerable for my x1950. Im working it on a 300 w powersupply and it somewhat is meant to be using a 450. you should own a vulnerable powersupply. Open it up and make confident each and every twine is disconnected(workstation of course off) and seem on the huge bite of metallic. examine it and with a bit of luck it meets the standards of the video card. commonly used: If it does not meet the standards, it somewhat is the potential furnish. If it does meet the standards, it somewhat is the fan. Oh, and those people who shop nattering approximately viruses and worms and stuff are stressful, thinking its continuously the priority. even however in case you have no longer have been given a anti-virus , you should get one and test.
2016-11-26 02:03:47
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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If you have a spare video card lying around or possibly another computer with a video card you could plug that in and try it out. It seems that you are able to boot since that fan is spinning so you should just swap components to make sure.
2007-01-03 16:00:31
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answer #3
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answered by d s 2
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The supply may have zapped your card. Well, it would have zapped (put a high voltage spike on) all the parts' rails, but possibly the video was sensitive to it). Best bet is to try the video card in another machine. Hey, ole buddy....
Once you are sure the video card is fine, see if you can borrow a different video card to try on your board. That way you are sure your board is not toast.
2007-01-03 16:04:06
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answer #4
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answered by MarkW 2
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Make sure your PSU is the same, or greater wattage then your old one. if there's no problems there, then try a different cable to connect your video card to your monitor. if it fails after that, then you should bring your PC to a PC shop and have either the video card, or motherboard tested, or both if you want to afford it. this will tell which one, or even both are failed.
Best of Luck :)
2007-01-03 16:04:03
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answer #5
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answered by Cory W 4
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How much watts is your new PSU?
Is it enough to juice up your PC?
Remember, all installed hardware requires power (RAM, CPU, GPU, HDD's and so on)
2007-01-03 16:00:44
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answer #6
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answered by INOA 7
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