![]() ![]() Solved! x240 boots with logo, but extremely dark, looks like a black screen. Solved! Toshiba: powers up, no splash screen, no caps or num lock lights Solved! Asus laptop boots up but the screen remains completely black, and a monitor doesn’t detect it. Question Asus Notebook boots only Occasionally Solved! Acer 6 Windows 10 stuck on black screen with mouse pointer and small flashing blue buffering symbol while trying to boot up Solved! Acer Nitro 5 AN515-53 Black screen, no logo, no windows boot, and can’t access bios Question Toshiba Laptop doesn't boot black screen Question Laptop Black Screen - Can't see BIOS ![]() Question Laptop screen doesn't turn on on windows and at boot but work on linux The screen didn't work again by not showing the Toshiba splash screen, nor does it work in Windows 10. Since resetting the CMOS did create a situation where the screen was operational, I decided to change out the CMOS battery with a brand new one (The computer is about 5 years old, and the battery was low after checking it with my DMM). Of course the Windows install screwed Ubuntu, the only OS that lets me use the screen, so I reinstalled that. ![]() Would it work a second time? I restart to find out. Upon restarting, the screen worked for the first time in forever the way it should: splash screen and worked in Windows. Scouring the internet, the potential of a BIOS issue came up, so I made sure my BIOS was up to date. I tried uninstalling and reinstalling the display adapter driver, which didn't change anything. Windows is successfully fixed, for the time being. I was able to finally reinstall Windows using the USB now. Screen is fine the whole time on Ubuntu still. Since there was something definitely going haywire on the windows side, I ran ntfsfix to see if I could repair the windows partition, and proceed with a clean install. SMART was passing, despite there being a value of 8 in the current pending sector count. Chkdsk wasn't able to complete successfully, stating there was an unspecified error.Īt this point I went into Ubuntu and checked my disk. Windows went south yesterday, and it wouldn't let me reinstall off of a recovery USB, giving me an error code of 0x80070570. The screen doesn't turn on in BIOS, or before that.Īlso, when in Windows, the screen is not detected at all, and when hooked up to an external display, device manager only shows a generic pnp monitor being present. However, since I have a dual boot with Ubuntu, I can select to boot into Ubuntu, and then the screen turns on! Also, the splash screen, and any other display can be seen on an external display, but the only time the built in screen works is when I'm running Ubuntu, and it only turns on after it has booted up completely. Upon boot, there is a black screen with no back light, the splash screen is missing, and if I boot through to Windows 10 the screen remains off. I have a Toshiba S55-C5474 laptop, and the display is acting funny. Question from niemi.rikki : "Laptop built in screen does not work during BIOS and in windows, but works with Ubuntu" I'm running memory check as I write this to see if there's a memory issue.Ĭould this be a hard drive issue? I dont care about the data on the windows partition, so I dont really care if I have to nuke that partition and start over. What I'm thinking, but need help troubleshooting: When booting from a usb, the screen does not work at all. I ran chkdsk, which exited before completing, throwing an unspecified error.įrom the command prompt, I tried /bootrec.exe/fixbcd and it said that no installation of windows was found. Upon reading this seems to possibly imply a memory issue. It has the blue death screen, and I cannot use system restore, as it says that this is not possible. When booting to Ubuntu, the screen turns on, and works fine. There is no power to the screen during boot, the grub menu not visible (I have an Ubuntu/Windows dual boot.) I posted a while back, and this time I have more information as I have been trying to figure out the issue, but it's still not working.Įverything is visible when using an external display. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |