F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems The system continuously shuts down the display.

The system continuously shuts down the display.

The system continuously shuts down the display.

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Clareesuh
Member
245
04-14-2016, 01:38 AM
#1
I initially thought it might be a hardware issue since the screen would freeze during startup. I tried using Linux, but it didn’t work in BIOS either. It’s hard to get Windows to load properly before the problem starts, and it seems to appear a few seconds after the spinning dots begin. This is really frustrating. While checking my BIOS, I spotted something that might have been changed—my overclock could have been disabled. Would a Windows 10 installation erase the BIOS? That overclock setting was quite difficult to configure back then. Intel 4770K @ 4.0 (possibly removed now), ASUS Z97 Extreme 4, 16GB DDR3, 1333MHz.
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Clareesuh
04-14-2016, 01:38 AM #1

I initially thought it might be a hardware issue since the screen would freeze during startup. I tried using Linux, but it didn’t work in BIOS either. It’s hard to get Windows to load properly before the problem starts, and it seems to appear a few seconds after the spinning dots begin. This is really frustrating. While checking my BIOS, I spotted something that might have been changed—my overclock could have been disabled. Would a Windows 10 installation erase the BIOS? That overclock setting was quite difficult to configure back then. Intel 4770K @ 4.0 (possibly removed now), ASUS Z97 Extreme 4, 16GB DDR3, 1333MHz.

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HockeyManiac91
Junior Member
5
04-14-2016, 07:52 AM
#2
Your system will clear overclock settings after several failed restarts without a stable OS load. Likely you cleared it during troubleshooting. On Windows, generating an install USB can serve as a recovery disk. Testing it in safe mode is a solid first step.
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HockeyManiac91
04-14-2016, 07:52 AM #2

Your system will clear overclock settings after several failed restarts without a stable OS load. Likely you cleared it during troubleshooting. On Windows, generating an install USB can serve as a recovery disk. Testing it in safe mode is a solid first step.

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britek
Junior Member
46
05-04-2016, 04:09 AM
#3
The USB key should work for your Windows installation, but double-check compatibility with your version.
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britek
05-04-2016, 04:09 AM #3

The USB key should work for your Windows installation, but double-check compatibility with your version.

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Lucky_Arnout
Member
158
05-04-2016, 07:18 PM
#4
Agreed. Avoid reinstalling unless necessary. There should be a "repair this PC" choice offering troubleshooting steps. A "Boot into safe mode" option is also available.
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Lucky_Arnout
05-04-2016, 07:18 PM #4

Agreed. Avoid reinstalling unless necessary. There should be a "repair this PC" choice offering troubleshooting steps. A "Boot into safe mode" option is also available.

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catlover415
Junior Member
29
05-06-2016, 04:57 AM
#5
The problem is your GPU drivers. Things you can try: Switch monitor to a different video output connector on the graphics card. Please wait a min when switching to see results. Win+P 2x times in a row, and hit Enter key. If nothing appear, do this sequence one more time. (This is to switch multiple display modes, it could have been set to something wrong). Try: Win + Ctrl + Shift + B keyboard shortcut. Special keyboard shortcut in Windows 10 to restart the GPU driver. This may take several seconds for the GPU drivers to unload and reload fully. Fail boot Windows 10 2 times (hit the reset button when you see the spinning dots), and you should get to the Windows 10 recovery mode. Windows will attempt to do a startup repair. That is fine, let it do its thing, even if that is not your problem. Once done, you have a menu where somewhere, you'll have "advance startup option", in there you can pick Safe Mode. Select "Safe Mode with networking". Go inside, and your screen should work fine. Uninstall your graphics card, and get the latest drivers from your manufacture website from your graphics card and install them. Once done, restart your system, and it should get back to normal Windows 10 boot mode, and your display should be working.
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catlover415
05-06-2016, 04:57 AM #5

The problem is your GPU drivers. Things you can try: Switch monitor to a different video output connector on the graphics card. Please wait a min when switching to see results. Win+P 2x times in a row, and hit Enter key. If nothing appear, do this sequence one more time. (This is to switch multiple display modes, it could have been set to something wrong). Try: Win + Ctrl + Shift + B keyboard shortcut. Special keyboard shortcut in Windows 10 to restart the GPU driver. This may take several seconds for the GPU drivers to unload and reload fully. Fail boot Windows 10 2 times (hit the reset button when you see the spinning dots), and you should get to the Windows 10 recovery mode. Windows will attempt to do a startup repair. That is fine, let it do its thing, even if that is not your problem. Once done, you have a menu where somewhere, you'll have "advance startup option", in there you can pick Safe Mode. Select "Safe Mode with networking". Go inside, and your screen should work fine. Uninstall your graphics card, and get the latest drivers from your manufacture website from your graphics card and install them. Once done, restart your system, and it should get back to normal Windows 10 boot mode, and your display should be working.

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Cokkie77
Senior Member
556
05-06-2016, 12:08 PM
#6
I will so attempt. Thank you.
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Cokkie77
05-06-2016, 12:08 PM #6

I will so attempt. Thank you.

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Dany1239
Junior Member
2
05-08-2016, 12:19 AM
#7
Win plus p twice functioned! Thanks you!
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Dany1239
05-08-2016, 12:19 AM #7

Win plus p twice functioned! Thanks you!