New
#11
Another thing.
What cable do you use? VGA? DVI?
Gateway Support - Video Modes
Those are precise, 100% VESA CVT Standard.Code:Resolution | H Frequency | V Frequency | DVI Mode? 1440x900 55.935 KHz 59.887 Hz Yes 1440x900 70.635 KHz 74.984 Hz No
Please post your EDID dump.
I've attached a custom inf that might help, but it's not based on your EDID so therefore use it at your own risk!
You need to create a custom resolution of 1440x900 @ 60Hz/75Hz(75Hz only when using VGA input) and choose CVT Standard at the Timing dropdown. That might be the reason why you cannot create any.
If still not working, there could be too high variations in H/V frequency and your Monitor Range Limits are too tight and get crossed sometimes. You could try using CVT-reduced blanking instead of CVT, if your monitor suports it (test only on 60Hz).
As a final hint, I would suggest testing the monitor on another GPU/computer with those two custom resolutions.
Good luck.
No... you didn't understand... Of course that it's hiding resolution that your monitor can't support. I said that you ADD custom resolution. Manually change timings of your monitor and force resolution and refresh that you used to have.
You have GTF, DMT, CVT, CVT reduced blank. Try one of those settings instead of automatic timing. Updating drivers won't help as far as I can see.
Yes I agree drivers would not be the issue. If the monitor is going out of frequency then the issue is with the refresh rate. To solve this you have to make sure that your forcing the monitor to run at a frequency it can handle.
You don't want anything to change the refresh rate of the monitor and that is why you have to force the refresh rate so that it can not be tampered with by anything else.
Also this is a common problem while gaming when the game is adjusted to a frequency that the monitor cannot handle however fixing that is much easier as you simply restore the game to default settings and then select a lower frequency.
At any rate the problem is not that big even if it might seem like it is you are just going to have to force the refresh rate and figure out the maximum frequency your monitor can handle at the resolution you want to set it at.
The optimal resolution is usually pretty high I know my optimal was the maximum resolution these monitors could even produce. Try setting the resolution to 1024x768 as that resolution is fairly easy for any monitor to handle. If it does not go out of frequency at that resolution you can bump it up a notch until you get a resolution that does not stay stable. Should give you a better idea how resolution effects refresh rates.
What I don't understand is... your post. It seems that I suggested the exact same thing, only more precise: "You need to create a custom resolution of 1440x900 @ 60Hz/75Hz(75Hz only when using VGA input) and choose CVT Standard at the Timing dropdown. That might be the reason why you cannot create any. [...] You could try using CVT-reduced blanking instead of CVT, if your monitor suports it (test only on 60Hz)".
Are we talking about monitor drivers? Because if we do, then I have to disagree with both of you. We need to get the facts right:
- It used to work before Windows 7, so we can rule out bandwidth problems (resolutions, frequencies).
- The cables are prone to failures but for that you cannot blaim Windows.
- The most relevant changes are... the GPU/monitor driver. Those two are interconnected.
Windows learns about the capabilities of your monitor from the device itself (i.e. EDID), if it supports PnP. Sometimes manufacturers update those by means of a custom driver inf, with stuff like maximum resolution supported, refresh rate limits etc.
The reason I asked for an EDID dump is that I suspect Windows 7 does not get the right timing definitions and sync scheme reported by the monitor. It's known that Microsoft changed something in this aspect, leading to all sorts of problems. Until I see that EDID dump, I have created a custom monitor driver based on a compatible EDID. It will inform Windows that it prefers the 1440x900 resolution at those exact timings (CVT) as specified by the manufacturer. It should work by its own, but if for some reasons those preferred detailed timings are ignored, you need to mirror them in the GPU driver by adding a custom resolution of 1440x900 with CVT timings.
Let's wait for Texascelt.
From nVidia's website, I am using version 190.62. I have not tried another cable, slipped my mind. I'll give that a shot.
I'll also give the EDID dump a shot. Can't hurt. I'll let you know how it works out.
Let me be clear: the inf i've attached in the previous post it's a driver for your monitor, not for the geforce. It takes few moments to open the Device manager and update the monitor driver with the custom one, it will not blow up your hardware so please give that a shoot, too. If anything goes wrong (out of range at windows startup), you can press F8 at boot and choose Enable low-resolution video and then remove the custom monitor driver. Or you can wait for me to take a look at your EDID dump (that you need to post here) and see if it's the real culprit.
DumpEDID v1.01
Copyright (c) 2006 Nir Sofer
Web site: NirSoft - freeware utilities: password recovery, system utilities, desktop utilities
*****************************************************************
Registry Key : DISPLAY\Default_Monitor\7&2a3be430&0&UID67109120
Monitor Name : FPD1975W
Serial Number : MGJ6AD0N13431
Manufacture Week : 42 / 2006
ManufacturerID : 63774 (0xF91E)
ProductID : 1915 (0x077B)
Serial Number (Numeric) : 0 (0x00000000)
EDID Version : 1.3
Display Gamma : 2.20
Vertical Frequency : 56 - 76 Hz
Horizontal Frequency : 31 - 84 KHz
Image Size : 41.0 X 25.7 cm (19.1 Inch)
Maximum Image Size : 41 X 26 cm (19.1 Inch)
Maximum Resolution : 1440 X 900
Support Standby Mode : Yes
Support Suspend Mode : Yes
Support Low-Power Mode : Yes
Support Default GTF : No
Digital : No
Supported Display Modes :
720 X 400 70 Hz
640 X 480 60 Hz
640 X 480 67 Hz
640 X 480 72 Hz
640 X 480 75 Hz
800 X 600 56 Hz
800 X 600 60 Hz
800 X 600 72 Hz
800 X 600 75 Hz
832 X 624 75 Hz
1024 X 768 60 Hz
1024 X 768 70 Hz
1024 X 768 75 Hz
1280 X 1024 75 Hz
1440 X 900 75 Hz
1280 X 1024 60 Hz
1280 X 960 60 Hz
1280 X 720 60 Hz
1280 X 800 75 Hz
1152 X 921 76 Hz
1400 X 1050 75 Hz
*****************************************************************
*****************************************************************
Registry Key : DISPLAY\GWY077B\7&2a3be430&0&UID67109120
Monitor Name : FPD1975W
Serial Number : MGJ6AD0N13431
Manufacture Week : 42 / 2006
ManufacturerID : 63774 (0xF91E)
ProductID : 1915 (0x077B)
Serial Number (Numeric) : 0 (0x00000000)
EDID Version : 1.3
Display Gamma : 2.20
Vertical Frequency : 56 - 76 Hz
Horizontal Frequency : 31 - 84 KHz
Image Size : 41.0 X 25.7 cm (19.1 Inch)
Maximum Image Size : 41 X 26 cm (19.1 Inch)
Maximum Resolution : 1440 X 900
Support Standby Mode : Yes
Support Suspend Mode : Yes
Support Low-Power Mode : Yes
Support Default GTF : No
Digital : No
Supported Display Modes :
720 X 400 70 Hz
640 X 480 60 Hz
640 X 480 67 Hz
640 X 480 72 Hz
640 X 480 75 Hz
800 X 600 56 Hz
800 X 600 60 Hz
800 X 600 72 Hz
800 X 600 75 Hz
832 X 624 75 Hz
1024 X 768 60 Hz
1024 X 768 70 Hz
1024 X 768 75 Hz
1280 X 1024 75 Hz
1440 X 900 75 Hz
1280 X 1024 60 Hz
1280 X 960 60 Hz
1280 X 720 60 Hz
1280 X 800 75 Hz
1152 X 921 76 Hz
1400 X 1050 75 Hz
*****************************************************************
I haven't tried the monitor driver yet. I'm also using VGA due to the DVI port on the monitor not working. Known issue with the monitor.
That's why I asked.
But your kidding about DVI not working right?
Known issue? And you accept that?
DVI gives so much better image than VGA, and it doesn't have issues with refresh rate.
You should not accept it not working.
Let your supplier supply you with another model that does what you pay for.
Good luck.
Excuse my ommision, but a more complete dump would be possible with softMCCS from entech. Select your monitor's name. File -> Save EDID as... and choose Save as type Raylar EDID file (*.dat). This may help identify the reason why the DVI port is not working (I suspect a bad EDID).