Results 1 to 11 of 11

Thread: LCD overclocking prob

  1. #1
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Croatia
    Posts
    102

    Unhappy LCD overclocking prob

    I tried to clock my samsung 932BF beyond its "max" 75Hz on its native resolution.I could go as far as 85Hz without problems,well,one problem only,a message that keeps popping out saying "Not optimum mode, recommended resolution 1280 X 1024 @ 60Hz?" Then the msg blanks out the screen,i press a button on the monitor and the picture is back,still on 85 Hz...untill the msg pops out again after 20-30 seconds.This is annoying as hell The message seems hard coded into the monitor,not even editing the monitors driver or registry values that hold the info/limits of max khz and Hz helped Is there anything that can be done to remove or block that damn msg? It would be a shame that this monitor cannot be used at its full potential since it can obviously work without problems on Hz much higher then declared by manufacturer.

  2. #2
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    North USA
    Posts
    670
    You're not effectively outputting anything more than 60hz, so pack it in. Even when set higher, LCDs will still display at 60hz and just throw away any extra.
    Asus P6T-DLX V2 1104 & i7 920 @ 4116 1.32v(Windows Reported) 1.3375v (BIOS Set) 196x20(1) HT OFF
    6GB OCZ Platinum DDR3 1600 3x2GB@ 7-7-7-24, 1.66v, 1568Mhz
    Sapphire 5870 @ 985/1245 1.2v
    X-Fi "Fatal1ty" & Klipsch ProMedia Ultra 5.1 Speaks/Beyerdynamic DT-880 Pro (2005 Model) and a mini3 amp
    WD 150GB Raptor (Games) & 2x WD 640GB (System)
    PC Power & Cooling 750w
    Homebrew watercooling on CPU and GPU
    and the best monitor ever made + a Samsung 226CW + Dell P2210 for eyefinity
    Windows 7 Utimate x64

  3. #3
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,917
    overclocking a monitor? lololol i would have never even though of such a thing.
    My Videos
    GRID Demolition Derby * GRID Camaro vs. Mustang * Audiosurf - Speed Racer
    I Shot the Hosties * Slightly Stupid * Dump Truck


    Intel Haswell 4770K * 2x8GB Mushkin Redline DDR3 1866 CL9 * Asus Maximus VI Gene * Sapphire 7870 GHz Edition
    500GB Samsung 840 Series SSD + 2TB WD Raid Edition 3 magnetic * SilverStone Temjin case * Corsair TX750 PSU * Corsair H60 water cooler * Win7 Pro x64

  4. #4
    PSU Expert
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Saskatchewan
    Posts
    732
    Quote Originally Posted by -= rtz =- View Post
    Is there anything that can be done to remove or block that damn msg? It would be a shame that this monitor cannot be used at its full potential since it can obviously work without problems on Hz much higher then declared by manufacturer.
    It's an LCD... different technology than a CRT. 60Hz is its full potential, because by design it doesn't have a refresh rate (the pixels are either on or off - there's no electron beam).
    Jetway HA07-Ultra, Phenom 9600, 4GB G.Skill 1066, Antec CP-1000, 3R Ice Age, Ultra Aluminus, HD2600XT, WD Black 640GB, Seagate 500GB 7200.11, Maxtor 200GB Diamondmax 10, Lite-On 48125W, Pioneer DVR-115D, Plextor PX-716SA

  5. #5
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Posts
    835
    ...overclocking a monitor?

    I dont see the need or point. And i dont think it would actually display past what it says its designed to, regardless of what your video card is sending it.

  6. #6
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Croatia
    Posts
    102
    No...this monitors full potential is 75 Hz and it is supported in drivers. And ur right that if u set higher Hz in a game like 100Hz f.e. the output is 60Hz and its shown on monitors OSD.But the way I did it the monitor showed 85 Hz on OSD and I find that to be accurate,the difference was very noticeable in fifa o8.On 75 Hz massive tearing,while on 85 Hz there almost wasnt any.LCD technology is like u described,but in fast moving games like fps games or racing simulations,refresh rate does matter on LCD,whatever u heard about it.At least that was my experience.

  7. #7
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    California
    Posts
    1,917
    or you could just enable V Sync or cap your framerate to eliminate tearing. we're only trying to help. i overclocked my toothbrush once and it brushed all the enamel off my teeth. i had to have a full set of caps put on. it was a truly painful experience, and it taught me to only overclock my CPU, FSB, RAM, and VGA. i never overclock anything else.
    My Videos
    GRID Demolition Derby * GRID Camaro vs. Mustang * Audiosurf - Speed Racer
    I Shot the Hosties * Slightly Stupid * Dump Truck


    Intel Haswell 4770K * 2x8GB Mushkin Redline DDR3 1866 CL9 * Asus Maximus VI Gene * Sapphire 7870 GHz Edition
    500GB Samsung 840 Series SSD + 2TB WD Raid Edition 3 magnetic * SilverStone Temjin case * Corsair TX750 PSU * Corsair H60 water cooler * Win7 Pro x64

  8. #8
    Xtreme Guru
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Ace Deuce, Michigan
    Posts
    3,955
    toothbrush? Is that for lols or to tell him not to oc his monitor?

    I agree that LCDs do need to have higher refresh rates (and now some lcd tvs actually have 100hz refresh rates) for high speed games, it can be very noticeable in some games, but I have no idea how to change the frequency like you did
    Quote Originally Posted by Hans de Vries View Post

    JF-AMD posting: IPC increases!!!!!!! How many times did I tell you!!!

    terrace215 post: IPC decreases, The more I post the more it decreases.
    terrace215 post: IPC decreases, The more I post the more it decreases.
    terrace215 post: IPC decreases, The more I post the more it decreases.
    .....}
    until (interrupt by Movieman)


    Regards, Hans

  9. #9
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    BOSTON
    Posts
    366
    Quote Originally Posted by xMrBunglex View Post
    or you could just enable V Sync or cap your framerate to eliminate tearing. we're only trying to help. i overclocked my toothbrush once and it brushed all the enamel off my teeth. i had to have a full set of caps put on. it was a truly painful experience, and it taught me to only overclock my CPU, FSB, RAM, and VGA. i never overclock anything else.
    I had to learn the hard way as well...
    AMD 64 3700+ San Diego
    Geil Ultra 1GB PC3200 RAM
    250+640GB
    Sapphire X850XT PE
    SINGLEC0RE4EVER

  10. #10
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Croatia
    Posts
    102
    Quote Originally Posted by AliG View Post
    I agree that LCDs do need to have higher refresh rates (and now some lcd tvs actually have 100hz refresh rates) for high speed games, it can be very noticeable in some games, but I have no idea how to change the frequency like you did
    Simple really,I did it via nvidia driver control panel,in "Screen resolutions and refresh rates" and then "advanced timings".Funny,I thought someone here at XS allready tried something like this Actually I ran into a old thread dating back from 2004 but ppl there were overclocking CRT's...

    I could enable vsync,but when u dont have a powerful enough rig that can match your fps with your refresh rate,ur screwed.And also vsync adds input lag/delay,which is highly annoying and unbearable in some games (in FPS games it completely changes your sensitivity).

    PS
    xMrBunglex sorry to hear about your teeth problems,I myself am preparing mentally cause of some dental problems and some painful months are coming ahead

  11. #11
    Xtreme X.I.P. Soulburner's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    Lincoln, NE
    Posts
    8,868
    Actually TV's now can run at 120Hz. 100 wouldn't work.

    120 = 24x5, 30x4, 60x2
    System
    ASUS Z170-Pro
    Skylake i7-6700K @ 4600 Mhz
    MSI GTX 1070 Armor OC
    32 GB G.Skill Ripjaws V
    Samsung 850 EVO (2)
    EVGA SuperNOVA 650 G2
    Corsair Hydro H90
    NZXT S340

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •