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>> No.10603231 [View]
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10603231

>>10596603
Now that we hit bump limit, I never told you where to go poking around in your UEFI settings to try and get that GTX650 to boot. I'm not quite sure where MSI would hide it, their documentation explains all of the overclocking submenus but none of the other ones.

1. With your 1080Ti still installed, enter setup.
2. Switch to "Advanced Mode".
3. Save your current UEFI settings to an "OC Profile" - I cannot be certain that it will save anything other than overclocking specific ones. The reason being if you fuck something up and can't boot, you will need to reset the CMOS. Your motherboard has a button on the rear I/O panel for it.
4. I would check "Boot" settings first, and then maybe the "PCIe" settings. You want to find an option that talks about "Video BIOS" "GPU BIOS" "GPU CSM" "GPU Option ROM" - anything like that. Make sure it's set to Legacy/Legacy First/CSM/CSM First/BIOS/BIOS First there are too many variations they could be using.
5. Hit F10 to save your changes and exit.
6. Turn it off.
7. Install the GTX650.
8. Use whichever video output is FARTHEST AWAY from the screw hole at the "top" of the slot, and closest to the top of the motherboard. That's usually the primary one. If it's an output your monitor doesn't support, use the next closest one.
9. Try and boot.

If you can't get an image, put your 1080 Ti back in, reset the CMOS, and try some other combination of Boot/PCIe UEFI settings.

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