Morning again Kenny if you are still there. I did not construct a reply very clearly last night due to being a bit tired. If you are still able to look in I will try again. What I meant to suggest was unplugging the Tower input from the monitor and switching on the monitor. In my experience all monitors will now either immediately display a message that says, no signal, or choose an input of say VGA DVI HDMI etc. This will depend of course on the make and age of the monitor. If none of those things happen then we suspect the monitor has degraded. It is not however definite, again depending on the make ... etc. etc. If you have another monitor handy and are able you woud then connect up to your Tower. Now this is where it can get bothersome. If the Tower is getting on and the test monitor is brand spanking(this applies to a permanent replacement) new make sure that the monitor has an input port that will accept you Tower output!(Important) Again in my experience, when you switch on the PC Tower and if the monitor is on(maybe you leave it on standby) then the monitor screen usually first shows somthing like ASUS motherboard details or some other manufacturers reminder of who is boss whilst the Tower boots up. It should then move on to your "background" page or other signs of the PC Tower being up and running and ready for your usual og in routine. If this indeed happens with the test monitor your old one is goosed. If the test monitor( unlikely) behaves like your old monitor then we know it is the Tower. We then have a number of things to check but we need a known good monitor for that. We can enter the bios during boot up for instance and check the power outputs from the Tower power supply. But we have to start with, the easy, unplug the Tower from the Monitor and switch on the monitor before we can do anything.