This is kind of a weird one.
Yesterday, when I finally got my computer to boot back up after re-installing my new PSU (I had to get a new psu to handle my new gpu), I was able to delete all my nvidia drivers that I could find, with my old Gigabyte 1070 in the slot. Except for the ones in the hidden files I guess. Then I go to download my new drivers for my new GPU, the software installer doesn't recognize my GPU (obviously) and it says the installation is cancelled.
I'm like, alright whatever I'll try to boot my new gpu anyways. So I load the new one into slot 1, and try to boot. my computer turns on, everything is working electronically, but it is not displaying to my monitor.
naturally I go to complain to my friend, but then after a long wait, my monitor started to display and everything was working.
What happened? Everything is working fine now, but it is still confusing to me why it would happen like that.
Should I put both of my GPU's into my motherboard at the same time, next time I end up getting a new gpu?
Yesterday, when I finally got my computer to boot back up after re-installing my new PSU (I had to get a new psu to handle my new gpu), I was able to delete all my nvidia drivers that I could find, with my old Gigabyte 1070 in the slot. Except for the ones in the hidden files I guess. Then I go to download my new drivers for my new GPU, the software installer doesn't recognize my GPU (obviously) and it says the installation is cancelled.
I'm like, alright whatever I'll try to boot my new gpu anyways. So I load the new one into slot 1, and try to boot. my computer turns on, everything is working electronically, but it is not displaying to my monitor.
naturally I go to complain to my friend, but then after a long wait, my monitor started to display and everything was working.
What happened? Everything is working fine now, but it is still confusing to me why it would happen like that.
Should I put both of my GPU's into my motherboard at the same time, next time I end up getting a new gpu?