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My PC (Compaq Presario) has an onboard Intel 3100 which is pretty lame wbut would be useful for testing on, or a 3rd monitor. I've then got a nVidia PCIx card installed. I can't seem to find a way to turn both on at once... is it likely this is a BIOS limitation?

Running Windows 7.

The official page suggests I can't do this but I wondered if there is a way?

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  • On some systems it will work OK. Commented Jun 1, 2011 at 23:00
  • indeed, i have seen this done, but it didnt work for me on a similar system with a slightly differing motherboard. Commented Jul 11, 2011 at 14:26

7 Answers 7

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To flesh out Sathya's answer a bit: In most systems, the same PCIe lanes are used for both the IGP and the PCIe-x16 slot for the video card. So either the slot can be used or the IGP. This means you can't even put non-video card devices (e.g. RAID controllers) into the x16 slot without losing access to the IGP -- you'd still have to install a video card in a different slot!

Late Edit: It appears that on Sandy Bridge systems with an H67 (and probably Z68, when they launch) chipsets, it's possible to run both the onboard GPU and an add-on graphics card at the same time. Other 6-series (and later) chipsets may work as long as both the CPU & MB Chipset support Intel's Flexible Display Interface, a DisplayPort-based standard that gives the integrated GPU a direct connection to the onboard video connectors.

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    Annoying but thanks for explaining why the limitation exists, at least I can reboot and toggle through BIOS fairly easily. Commented Feb 3, 2011 at 14:34
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    You say that "It appears" this is possible on Sandy Bridge systems. Do you have any documentation or reference that confirms this? Have you done it personally? I notice that this question was closed as a duplicate of this one, but it's clearly not... Your latest edit makes it appear that the answer is quite different in the case of Sandy Bridge. Commented Jul 11, 2011 at 10:49
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    @Cody: I think the key is that the CPU & Chipset must support Intel's Flexible Display Interface in order to work alongside a discrete GPU. That's what gives the system a direct connection from the integrated GPU to the onboard video connectors instead of sharing PCIe lanes. I don't have direct experience myself though, so I can't give you a definitive answer. Commented Jul 11, 2011 at 13:11
  • What if you have 2 PCIe slots OR if the video card is a PCI card? Commented Jun 23, 2013 at 17:36
  • @ClayNichols: It's going to depend on how they're connected to the chipset. In many systems, 2 PCIe x16 slots run in 8x+8x mode when both slots are occupied and both slots share lanes, so if the onboard GPU is also sharing those lanes, then my answer still stands. Commented Jun 24, 2013 at 12:57
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Unfortunately, there's no way around this limitation - using an external card automatically turns off the IGP.

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    Just for clarity, this is true for many, but not all motherboards. I have personally run both an AGP card and the onboard to support two monitors on an older system. I have also heard of systems which will permit running the onbaord alongside a PCIe based card, but I have not tested that or researched it extensively. Commented Jan 19, 2012 at 16:50
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    @TimothyAWiseman: AGP was a dedicated interface, and at the time northbridge integrated video was probably done via a PCI interface (especially with Intel chipsets). That would have greatly limited the possibility of resource contention. That's just a hunch though. Ultimately the answer varied from chipset to chipset. Commented Mar 26, 2012 at 12:34
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In Asrock UEFI Bios of the h81m-vg4 motherboard there is an option to enable the onboard graphics while you have an additional video card connected:

Advanced > chipset configuration > IGPU Multi-Monitor > Enabled.

The h81 chipset allows the flexible display interface. I tested with the intel g1820 and the msi r5750 and I'm able to run up to 4 independent displays.

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Old thread, but I have a Dell Optiplex 390 w/Intel integrated 2000 and am able to select multiple displays in BIOS and run both integrated and graphics card. Always looking for other desktops that have this capability as I am a quad-monitor individual on a dual-monitor budget....

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I saw this done on YouTube. The guy pressed 'delete' while his machine was booting. When the bios came up he went to 'video controllers' and re-arranged the order of the bootable graphics He made IGP first then PCIe second instead of the default way of PCI being first. He explained that by doing it this way the MOBO couldn't disable the IGP and that they both would play. I tried to do it on my machine but I haven't been able to find the control in order to re-arrange it, so I just had to use two video cards for the four monitors.

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    Please consider linking to the youtube video if you think it helpful. Commented Jan 27, 2013 at 9:26
  • Probably he is referring to this video => youtube.com/watch?v=N8nMShuSfgI Commented Oct 27, 2013 at 12:53
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I run 3 amd machines that have onboard and pcie video. All 3 machines have 3 monitors. 1 connected to onboard video (DVI) and 2 connected to the PCIE video card (DVI).

In the bios you set primary to pcie and enable onboard video. Also set 'surround view' or similar switch to enable.

If all of a sudden you lose a screen but all hardware tests ok then change your cmos battery and restore the settings.

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This thread helped and I am now running 4 monitors 2 on the dedicated GPU and 2 on the onboard GPU ASRock Model H110M-HDV/D3 (CPUSocket) 6500 Dedicated 3 ports but only 2 can be used at a time it seems = NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 1/ HDMI 2/ DVI Onboard Intel HD Graphics 530 3 ports 1/ HDMI 1/ VGA of all things and it runs at full speed for what I want / The DVI would not work.

ASUS Del key to enter Bios Advanced mode F6 Advanced tab Chipset Configuration folder Primary graphics card Change it from PCI Express to Onboard Exit tab SAVE CHANGES AND EXIT Now both cards will work.

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  • Please don't add "thanks" as answers. They don't actually provide an answer to the question, and can be perceived as noise by its future visitors. Once you earn enough reputation, you will gain privileges to upvote answers you like. This way future visitors of the question will see a higher vote count on that answer, and the answerer will also be rewarded with reputation points. See Why is voting important. Commented Mar 1 at 13:00

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