F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Optimize your setup by resolving the black screen issue on your LG TV 32LK50 with BIOS updates.

Optimize your setup by resolving the black screen issue on your LG TV 32LK50 with BIOS updates.

Optimize your setup by resolving the black screen issue on your LG TV 32LK50 with BIOS updates.

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William_GTO
Junior Member
40
05-29-2016, 09:27 PM
#1
I'm having trouble connecting the Optiplex 390 from the office to my LG 32LK50 TV via HDMI. The screen goes black even though the TV is on, and I can use Windows 10 without issues. No monitor is available. Any advice or solutions? Thank you.
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William_GTO
05-29-2016, 09:27 PM #1

I'm having trouble connecting the Optiplex 390 from the office to my LG 32LK50 TV via HDMI. The screen goes black even though the TV is on, and I can use Windows 10 without issues. No monitor is available. Any advice or solutions? Thank you.

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_zaphire_
Member
198
05-30-2016, 05:14 AM
#2
Press the escape key repeatedly swiftly once the system launches and observe if a BIOS menu appears. Some screens might need more time to identify connected graphics and could be beyond the duration the BIOS window remains visible.
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_zaphire_
05-30-2016, 05:14 AM #2

Press the escape key repeatedly swiftly once the system launches and observe if a BIOS menu appears. Some screens might need more time to identify connected graphics and could be beyond the duration the BIOS window remains visible.

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MissCGaming
Member
116
06-06-2016, 09:00 PM
#3
I can use the quick boot feature by pressing F2, but it’s taking about 15 minutes or longer, and I’m not getting any results. It might be related to the BIOS or the HDMI TV, which is confusing for me.
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MissCGaming
06-06-2016, 09:00 PM #3

I can use the quick boot feature by pressing F2, but it’s taking about 15 minutes or longer, and I’m not getting any results. It might be related to the BIOS or the HDMI TV, which is confusing for me.

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Lest00
Junior Member
29
06-06-2016, 11:00 PM
#4
You might require a monitor to see and adjust BIOS configurations. TVs typically operate at lower refresh rates compared to monitors, which can make it hard to view a BIOS display. Additionally, the TV may have more pixels to process, and this issue often arises once the operating system and graphics drivers are fully loaded.
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Lest00
06-06-2016, 11:00 PM #4

You might require a monitor to see and adjust BIOS configurations. TVs typically operate at lower refresh rates compared to monitors, which can make it hard to view a BIOS display. Additionally, the TV may have more pixels to process, and this issue often arises once the operating system and graphics drivers are fully loaded.