Turn BIOS on C24-960 all in one PC. How can I display the BIOS on the external monitor?

terra2012
terra2012 Member Posts: 5 New User
edited December 3 in All-In-One PCs

I am working in windows 10 on an external monitor because I broke the screen on my computer. Now I need to enter the BIOS to install windows 11. But the BIOS is displayed only on the broken screen, on which almost nothing is visible. How can I display the BIOS on the external monitor?

[Edited the thread to add issue detail]

Best Answer

  • AnhEZ28
    AnhEZ28 ACE, Member Posts: 4,464 Pathfinder
    Answer ✓

    @terra2012

    Seems like the internal screen is set to default during POST. If you have another computer with an M.2 SSD box, you can use WintoHDD to make a Windows installation directly on the SSD. Or bring that SSD to a PC repair shop and ask them to install Windows on that SSD.

    Please remember to include @AnhEZ28 when you want to reply back to my comment so that I can check your response.
    Thank you and have a nice day!

Answers

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,500 Trailblazer

    By default, your system doesn’t show BIOS on an external monitor. You need to make your external monitor as the primary monitor in windows which you probably didn't do . Go into the display settings and change that and then reboot the system as then you wil be able to see the bios settings. Good luck.

    If this answers your question and solved your query please "Click on Yes" or "Click on Like" if you find my answer useful👍

  • terra2012
    terra2012 Member Posts: 5 New User

    The external display is the main one in the system. The BIOS was not displayed on it, but I didn't need it before
    
    
    


  • AnhEZ28
    AnhEZ28 ACE, Member Posts: 4,464 Pathfinder

    @terra2012

    The machine uses its screen as the primary one so BIOS will not show on the external screen. Disconnecting the broken screen might work (not sure about this). Or just do the upgrade to Windows 11 while you are in Windows 10.

    Please remember to include @AnhEZ28 when you want to reply back to my comment so that I can check your response.
    Thank you and have a nice day!
  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,645 Trailblazer

    Yes, I believe the only way to have the external monitor as the default before the OS is loaded is to physically disconnect the internal monitor from the motherboard, and it's not assured that will work. For your Aspire C24-960 you can use this as a guide:

    Once the LVDS and backlight cables are disconnected, reassemble the rest in reverse order. At that point your all in one will act like a regular desktop, and only display on the external monitor.

    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.
  • terra2012
    terra2012 Member Posts: 5 New User

    Thank you for your participation in my problem. Unfortunately, my windows does not work correctly to update to windows 11. A clean installation from a bootable media is needed. Disabling the matrix according to the instructions did not help. The external monitor starts working only when the windows desktop appears. In the settings, it is now the only one.
    
    
    


  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,645 Trailblazer

    So with the LVDS and backlight cables removed it still doesn't display anything on the external monitor during POST? The C24-960 shouldn't have any issues running Windows 11, why does it fail when doing the update from Windows?

    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.
  • terra2012
    terra2012 Member Posts: 5 New User

    That's right. Nothing shows on external monitor during POST with LVDS disabled. Error occurs during windows update. Microsoft support recommends doing clean install of windows 11 from bootable USB media
    
    
    


  • AnhEZ28
    AnhEZ28 ACE, Member Posts: 4,464 Pathfinder
    Answer ✓

    @terra2012

    Seems like the internal screen is set to default during POST. If you have another computer with an M.2 SSD box, you can use WintoHDD to make a Windows installation directly on the SSD. Or bring that SSD to a PC repair shop and ask them to install Windows on that SSD.

    Please remember to include @AnhEZ28 when you want to reply back to my comment so that I can check your response.
    Thank you and have a nice day!