That's generous of you to say, but honestly I don't think it was
that great of an answer. I was just clearing up a misconception.
It doesn't really solve your problem.
I'm having difficulty in seeing how the problem you describe in your original post, where all your monitors go black, is connected to what you describe in Reply #4, about Adobe Media Encoder.
Are you saying that when you convert something in AME, that all your monitors go black? And that you can reproduce this behavior at will with specific files? I would find that surprising.
If that were true, I would have to suspect that you are doing hardware accelerated decoding or encoding in AME, and that that is triggering some bug in your video driver or fault in your video card. I could even think of a contrived explanation where doing all that work pushes the temperature on the video card too high, and it flakes out. But I would expect that behavior to also occur if you play 3d games on that computer. Do the fans on the card work? You might monitor the temperature on the card. But I would still favor a fault in the driver or the card.
You said you tried the "latest" driver, but that wasn't really my original advice. The latest driver is not necessarily the best. Bugs get introduced, and stay for a while. I would try a driver that's a year old. Or I would try the release of the driver that was current when your model of card was first released.
You can also of course try disabling hardware acceleration in MC. You know that option is currently enabled because you show it in your screenshot. That might avoid a problem, but it won't really cure it if it also occurs when using Adobe Media Encoder.