Not to be expected IMHO.
That defies to some extent what you've described, though. Logically, the old card tried to pull more amps than the PSU could supply so the PSU gave out. I wouldn't have expected the AGP card to have been damaged but can't rule that out.
Have you got your settings right like disabling the internal monitor?
It's one of those I'd usually need to have in front of me to solve.
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On what you've described, fear the worst. Mobos aren't worth repairing as their replacement is cheap enough (if you're not broke).
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When you put the AGP card in, if the drivers are well behaved, they'll force the internal graphics to be disabled; in saying that, I know that's the case for Nvidia on PCI-E but wouldn't be sure about AGP.
Does the on-board graphics work when the AGP card is out? If so, then what appears to be happening is that the AGP card is registered and the on-board graphics disabled.
You should in any case go into Device Manager and report in all configurations what is reported for the Display Adapters and indeed whethe or not both are seen present and one is disabled.
You haven't mentioned which motherboard or which AGP graphics so there's little for us to research. Also it would be helpful to know the PSU wattage you had in then and what you've got now.
If you plug in the AGP card it needs power. The AGP bus provides power and if it's not enough, the card reports back and you are prompted to supply more. You would be expected to turn off, connect the 4 wire supply, power on and off you go. I wouldn't expect damage to anything.
So, with the drip feed of details we're getting, can we please have the full picture?
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In order to help further, I do need the answers to my other questions:
Does the on-board graphics work when the AGP card is out?
You should in any case go into Device Manager and report in all configurations (AGP in + power connected then AGP out) what is reported for the Display Adapters and indeed whether or not both are seen present and one is disabled.
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You would have the AGP card in (with the power wire attached). Incidentally you could check that the 4 pin wire goes to the power distribution loom point on the motherboard. I hope it's the right voltage!
Anyway, with the card in as above, go into Control Panel/System/Hardware/Device Manager
Scroll down to Display Adapters and there should only be the AGP adapter listed. If it isn't, the onboard adapter will be listed and it means that the AGP card hasn't bee recognised. Whatever is there, click onto the device and take a screenshot to post in your reply or report what's in the location entry and the status box.
If both are present (which is what I would expect), the status of one of them should be disabled. Please report what you see.
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So we've tried everything I can think of.
With the AGP card out, there may be something in System Devices under Device Manager that says the AGP port is disabled - I no longer have an AGP port PC so can't say how/if AGP is represented in Device Manager.
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There may be an an AGP setting in the BIOS as I recall.
If there it allows you to set x4 or x8 or whatever. Worth a look and a try.
Good thinking.
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