Cannot set Max Screen Resolution of 2560x1440 with DELL U2711 Monitor
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3
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I have a DELL U2711 Monitor (27" Inches) with a Nvidia GTX 460 video card. The monitor can reach 2560 x 1440 max and the Video card 2560 x 1600 max. But The monitor only reaches 1680x1050. If I use a higher resolution all the screen looks scramble (like the image below).
I have search the Internet and they say the solution was to use a DVI-D (Dual Link DVI) cable. I have been using that cable, but I got a new one just in case and the problem stills the same.
As an extra data for the problem: The DELL Monitor has its own "on screen" Menu, used to choose its settings. In it you can see the info about the resolution. When the resolution is at 1680x1050 or less the Resolution on the Display Menu will show the same. But if I choose the 2560 x 1440 resolution on Windows 7 the Display Menu will show 1280x1440 (as also the image will look as I describe above, please use the link).
Any suggestions?
graphics-card display resolution
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I have a DELL U2711 Monitor (27" Inches) with a Nvidia GTX 460 video card. The monitor can reach 2560 x 1440 max and the Video card 2560 x 1600 max. But The monitor only reaches 1680x1050. If I use a higher resolution all the screen looks scramble (like the image below).
I have search the Internet and they say the solution was to use a DVI-D (Dual Link DVI) cable. I have been using that cable, but I got a new one just in case and the problem stills the same.
As an extra data for the problem: The DELL Monitor has its own "on screen" Menu, used to choose its settings. In it you can see the info about the resolution. When the resolution is at 1680x1050 or less the Resolution on the Display Menu will show the same. But if I choose the 2560 x 1440 resolution on Windows 7 the Display Menu will show 1280x1440 (as also the image will look as I describe above, please use the link).
Any suggestions?
graphics-card display resolution
I fixed the images you posted, but what exactly do they indicate? You've given no context for the pictures so they're really not too helpful.
– Moses
Nov 25 '13 at 21:24
Thank you !!! but at the end of the first paragraph says: "But The monitor only reaches 1680x1050. If I use a higher resolution all the screen looks scramble (like the image below)"
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:22
Ahh. I did not catch that part, my mistake.
– Moses
Nov 26 '13 at 0:39
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I have a DELL U2711 Monitor (27" Inches) with a Nvidia GTX 460 video card. The monitor can reach 2560 x 1440 max and the Video card 2560 x 1600 max. But The monitor only reaches 1680x1050. If I use a higher resolution all the screen looks scramble (like the image below).
I have search the Internet and they say the solution was to use a DVI-D (Dual Link DVI) cable. I have been using that cable, but I got a new one just in case and the problem stills the same.
As an extra data for the problem: The DELL Monitor has its own "on screen" Menu, used to choose its settings. In it you can see the info about the resolution. When the resolution is at 1680x1050 or less the Resolution on the Display Menu will show the same. But if I choose the 2560 x 1440 resolution on Windows 7 the Display Menu will show 1280x1440 (as also the image will look as I describe above, please use the link).
Any suggestions?
graphics-card display resolution
I have a DELL U2711 Monitor (27" Inches) with a Nvidia GTX 460 video card. The monitor can reach 2560 x 1440 max and the Video card 2560 x 1600 max. But The monitor only reaches 1680x1050. If I use a higher resolution all the screen looks scramble (like the image below).
I have search the Internet and they say the solution was to use a DVI-D (Dual Link DVI) cable. I have been using that cable, but I got a new one just in case and the problem stills the same.
As an extra data for the problem: The DELL Monitor has its own "on screen" Menu, used to choose its settings. In it you can see the info about the resolution. When the resolution is at 1680x1050 or less the Resolution on the Display Menu will show the same. But if I choose the 2560 x 1440 resolution on Windows 7 the Display Menu will show 1280x1440 (as also the image will look as I describe above, please use the link).
Any suggestions?
graphics-card display resolution
graphics-card display resolution
edited Feb 25 '16 at 11:30
Hennes
58.7k792141
58.7k792141
asked Nov 25 '13 at 19:40
EdurdoRG
19113
19113
I fixed the images you posted, but what exactly do they indicate? You've given no context for the pictures so they're really not too helpful.
– Moses
Nov 25 '13 at 21:24
Thank you !!! but at the end of the first paragraph says: "But The monitor only reaches 1680x1050. If I use a higher resolution all the screen looks scramble (like the image below)"
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:22
Ahh. I did not catch that part, my mistake.
– Moses
Nov 26 '13 at 0:39
add a comment |
I fixed the images you posted, but what exactly do they indicate? You've given no context for the pictures so they're really not too helpful.
– Moses
Nov 25 '13 at 21:24
Thank you !!! but at the end of the first paragraph says: "But The monitor only reaches 1680x1050. If I use a higher resolution all the screen looks scramble (like the image below)"
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:22
Ahh. I did not catch that part, my mistake.
– Moses
Nov 26 '13 at 0:39
I fixed the images you posted, but what exactly do they indicate? You've given no context for the pictures so they're really not too helpful.
– Moses
Nov 25 '13 at 21:24
I fixed the images you posted, but what exactly do they indicate? You've given no context for the pictures so they're really not too helpful.
– Moses
Nov 25 '13 at 21:24
Thank you !!! but at the end of the first paragraph says: "But The monitor only reaches 1680x1050. If I use a higher resolution all the screen looks scramble (like the image below)"
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:22
Thank you !!! but at the end of the first paragraph says: "But The monitor only reaches 1680x1050. If I use a higher resolution all the screen looks scramble (like the image below)"
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:22
Ahh. I did not catch that part, my mistake.
– Moses
Nov 26 '13 at 0:39
Ahh. I did not catch that part, my mistake.
– Moses
Nov 26 '13 at 0:39
add a comment |
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
The bandwith can be a problem. Because the crt monitors died out, the refresh rate isn't a real important thing. I suggest try to reduce it so low as it is possible (if you use windows, it is in the advanced properties of your display settings). If it works, you can set higher refresh rate, if the very realtime graphics is to you important.
If it worked, please don't forget to accept my answer. :-)
Really Thanks !!! but I am having a hard time trying to find the bandwidth of my monitor. In "Advance Settings" I can only see "Monitor Settings": Screen Rate (59 and 60 Hertz), Colors: True Color (32 bit), Monitor Type: Properties Screen with 3 Tabs: General, Driver and Details which only give me information but nothing to change or something like bandwidth. I also searched in the "Nvidia Control Panel" but nothing about Bandwidth. Please help me and thanks for the already given help.
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 13:21
No, you don't need to worry about bandwidth calculations. You should only set the lowest possible refresh rate in your display properties.
– peterh
Nov 29 '13 at 13:23
1
Well that did it. I created a custom resolution at 2560x1440 at 37 hertz and worked. I did it using the Nvidia Control Panel. It´s great to have the big resolution but anyway I wonder why I can not use its native Refresh Rate of 60 Hertz. Thanks a lot !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 16:46
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Check the cable and make sure it's Dual Link as the behavior your seeing suggests it is not. The graphics card is listed as having two Dual Link DVI ports so either port should work.
Image from Wikipedia article on DVI.
I am sure I am using the last one in your picture: DVI-D (Dual Link). Thank You !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:24
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I had this problem myself, and it was indeed due to not using a DVI dual link cable. And on top of that, the first videocard I tried on didn't support the resolution 2560x1440, but that was at work just to test. At home, I thought to make it quick and just replaced my monitor, and kept the cable I was using for years.
Luckily the monitor comes with a dual-link cable so just hooking that one up should do the trick.
Alternatively (and if possible, my suggestion as well) use a DisplayPort cable.
This did it for me, too.
– Marie. P.
Jan 14 '17 at 10:14
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I have a u2713hm and had the same problem. I am using a DVI-D cable but it was a cheap one so have ordered something more premium, i'll try that when it arrives. In the meantime I managed to get a decent picture by going into the Nvidia control panel > change resolution > customise and dropped the refresh rate 1Hz at a time and testing the new setting. Eventually got a good picture at 40Hz, not perfect for gaming but fine for everything else.
GTX 550ti on Win 10, screen worked perfectly on Win 7 at 60Hz.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I had the exact same issue. Using a high-end 27-inch monitor I was getting that same blurry effect. By creating a custom resolution and reducing the refresh rate to 40 Hz was able to get a crisp clear picture.
However applications like Photoshop suffer when rendering, there is a noticeable delay. Can't have it all I guess.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I had the same problem with my u2711, i just bought used u2711 and find the very same problem, since i dont have any display port, i use hdmi and it can reach the highest resolution (with create new custom resolution) but it appears with blurry and un-crisp display, and i tried with cheap dvi-d dual link cable and again it can reach the highest resolution (native) but not even better, blurry just like pics above. But since i got a new hi-quality-premium dvi-d dual link cable and it makes the display can reach highest 2560 x 1440 native resolution with very amazing sharp, crisp and lovely display.
So in my case, the problem is the poor quality of the DVI-d Dual Link cable.
add a comment |
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
The bandwith can be a problem. Because the crt monitors died out, the refresh rate isn't a real important thing. I suggest try to reduce it so low as it is possible (if you use windows, it is in the advanced properties of your display settings). If it works, you can set higher refresh rate, if the very realtime graphics is to you important.
If it worked, please don't forget to accept my answer. :-)
Really Thanks !!! but I am having a hard time trying to find the bandwidth of my monitor. In "Advance Settings" I can only see "Monitor Settings": Screen Rate (59 and 60 Hertz), Colors: True Color (32 bit), Monitor Type: Properties Screen with 3 Tabs: General, Driver and Details which only give me information but nothing to change or something like bandwidth. I also searched in the "Nvidia Control Panel" but nothing about Bandwidth. Please help me and thanks for the already given help.
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 13:21
No, you don't need to worry about bandwidth calculations. You should only set the lowest possible refresh rate in your display properties.
– peterh
Nov 29 '13 at 13:23
1
Well that did it. I created a custom resolution at 2560x1440 at 37 hertz and worked. I did it using the Nvidia Control Panel. It´s great to have the big resolution but anyway I wonder why I can not use its native Refresh Rate of 60 Hertz. Thanks a lot !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 16:46
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
The bandwith can be a problem. Because the crt monitors died out, the refresh rate isn't a real important thing. I suggest try to reduce it so low as it is possible (if you use windows, it is in the advanced properties of your display settings). If it works, you can set higher refresh rate, if the very realtime graphics is to you important.
If it worked, please don't forget to accept my answer. :-)
Really Thanks !!! but I am having a hard time trying to find the bandwidth of my monitor. In "Advance Settings" I can only see "Monitor Settings": Screen Rate (59 and 60 Hertz), Colors: True Color (32 bit), Monitor Type: Properties Screen with 3 Tabs: General, Driver and Details which only give me information but nothing to change or something like bandwidth. I also searched in the "Nvidia Control Panel" but nothing about Bandwidth. Please help me and thanks for the already given help.
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 13:21
No, you don't need to worry about bandwidth calculations. You should only set the lowest possible refresh rate in your display properties.
– peterh
Nov 29 '13 at 13:23
1
Well that did it. I created a custom resolution at 2560x1440 at 37 hertz and worked. I did it using the Nvidia Control Panel. It´s great to have the big resolution but anyway I wonder why I can not use its native Refresh Rate of 60 Hertz. Thanks a lot !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 16:46
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
up vote
0
down vote
accepted
The bandwith can be a problem. Because the crt monitors died out, the refresh rate isn't a real important thing. I suggest try to reduce it so low as it is possible (if you use windows, it is in the advanced properties of your display settings). If it works, you can set higher refresh rate, if the very realtime graphics is to you important.
If it worked, please don't forget to accept my answer. :-)
The bandwith can be a problem. Because the crt monitors died out, the refresh rate isn't a real important thing. I suggest try to reduce it so low as it is possible (if you use windows, it is in the advanced properties of your display settings). If it works, you can set higher refresh rate, if the very realtime graphics is to you important.
If it worked, please don't forget to accept my answer. :-)
answered Nov 25 '13 at 19:51
community wiki
peterh
Really Thanks !!! but I am having a hard time trying to find the bandwidth of my monitor. In "Advance Settings" I can only see "Monitor Settings": Screen Rate (59 and 60 Hertz), Colors: True Color (32 bit), Monitor Type: Properties Screen with 3 Tabs: General, Driver and Details which only give me information but nothing to change or something like bandwidth. I also searched in the "Nvidia Control Panel" but nothing about Bandwidth. Please help me and thanks for the already given help.
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 13:21
No, you don't need to worry about bandwidth calculations. You should only set the lowest possible refresh rate in your display properties.
– peterh
Nov 29 '13 at 13:23
1
Well that did it. I created a custom resolution at 2560x1440 at 37 hertz and worked. I did it using the Nvidia Control Panel. It´s great to have the big resolution but anyway I wonder why I can not use its native Refresh Rate of 60 Hertz. Thanks a lot !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 16:46
add a comment |
Really Thanks !!! but I am having a hard time trying to find the bandwidth of my monitor. In "Advance Settings" I can only see "Monitor Settings": Screen Rate (59 and 60 Hertz), Colors: True Color (32 bit), Monitor Type: Properties Screen with 3 Tabs: General, Driver and Details which only give me information but nothing to change or something like bandwidth. I also searched in the "Nvidia Control Panel" but nothing about Bandwidth. Please help me and thanks for the already given help.
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 13:21
No, you don't need to worry about bandwidth calculations. You should only set the lowest possible refresh rate in your display properties.
– peterh
Nov 29 '13 at 13:23
1
Well that did it. I created a custom resolution at 2560x1440 at 37 hertz and worked. I did it using the Nvidia Control Panel. It´s great to have the big resolution but anyway I wonder why I can not use its native Refresh Rate of 60 Hertz. Thanks a lot !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 16:46
Really Thanks !!! but I am having a hard time trying to find the bandwidth of my monitor. In "Advance Settings" I can only see "Monitor Settings": Screen Rate (59 and 60 Hertz), Colors: True Color (32 bit), Monitor Type: Properties Screen with 3 Tabs: General, Driver and Details which only give me information but nothing to change or something like bandwidth. I also searched in the "Nvidia Control Panel" but nothing about Bandwidth. Please help me and thanks for the already given help.
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 13:21
Really Thanks !!! but I am having a hard time trying to find the bandwidth of my monitor. In "Advance Settings" I can only see "Monitor Settings": Screen Rate (59 and 60 Hertz), Colors: True Color (32 bit), Monitor Type: Properties Screen with 3 Tabs: General, Driver and Details which only give me information but nothing to change or something like bandwidth. I also searched in the "Nvidia Control Panel" but nothing about Bandwidth. Please help me and thanks for the already given help.
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 13:21
No, you don't need to worry about bandwidth calculations. You should only set the lowest possible refresh rate in your display properties.
– peterh
Nov 29 '13 at 13:23
No, you don't need to worry about bandwidth calculations. You should only set the lowest possible refresh rate in your display properties.
– peterh
Nov 29 '13 at 13:23
1
1
Well that did it. I created a custom resolution at 2560x1440 at 37 hertz and worked. I did it using the Nvidia Control Panel. It´s great to have the big resolution but anyway I wonder why I can not use its native Refresh Rate of 60 Hertz. Thanks a lot !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 16:46
Well that did it. I created a custom resolution at 2560x1440 at 37 hertz and worked. I did it using the Nvidia Control Panel. It´s great to have the big resolution but anyway I wonder why I can not use its native Refresh Rate of 60 Hertz. Thanks a lot !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 29 '13 at 16:46
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Check the cable and make sure it's Dual Link as the behavior your seeing suggests it is not. The graphics card is listed as having two Dual Link DVI ports so either port should work.
Image from Wikipedia article on DVI.
I am sure I am using the last one in your picture: DVI-D (Dual Link). Thank You !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:24
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
Check the cable and make sure it's Dual Link as the behavior your seeing suggests it is not. The graphics card is listed as having two Dual Link DVI ports so either port should work.
Image from Wikipedia article on DVI.
I am sure I am using the last one in your picture: DVI-D (Dual Link). Thank You !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:24
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
Check the cable and make sure it's Dual Link as the behavior your seeing suggests it is not. The graphics card is listed as having two Dual Link DVI ports so either port should work.
Image from Wikipedia article on DVI.
Check the cable and make sure it's Dual Link as the behavior your seeing suggests it is not. The graphics card is listed as having two Dual Link DVI ports so either port should work.
Image from Wikipedia article on DVI.
answered Nov 25 '13 at 21:36
Brian
8,1481833
8,1481833
I am sure I am using the last one in your picture: DVI-D (Dual Link). Thank You !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:24
add a comment |
I am sure I am using the last one in your picture: DVI-D (Dual Link). Thank You !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:24
I am sure I am using the last one in your picture: DVI-D (Dual Link). Thank You !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:24
I am sure I am using the last one in your picture: DVI-D (Dual Link). Thank You !!!
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:24
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I had this problem myself, and it was indeed due to not using a DVI dual link cable. And on top of that, the first videocard I tried on didn't support the resolution 2560x1440, but that was at work just to test. At home, I thought to make it quick and just replaced my monitor, and kept the cable I was using for years.
Luckily the monitor comes with a dual-link cable so just hooking that one up should do the trick.
Alternatively (and if possible, my suggestion as well) use a DisplayPort cable.
This did it for me, too.
– Marie. P.
Jan 14 '17 at 10:14
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I had this problem myself, and it was indeed due to not using a DVI dual link cable. And on top of that, the first videocard I tried on didn't support the resolution 2560x1440, but that was at work just to test. At home, I thought to make it quick and just replaced my monitor, and kept the cable I was using for years.
Luckily the monitor comes with a dual-link cable so just hooking that one up should do the trick.
Alternatively (and if possible, my suggestion as well) use a DisplayPort cable.
This did it for me, too.
– Marie. P.
Jan 14 '17 at 10:14
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
I had this problem myself, and it was indeed due to not using a DVI dual link cable. And on top of that, the first videocard I tried on didn't support the resolution 2560x1440, but that was at work just to test. At home, I thought to make it quick and just replaced my monitor, and kept the cable I was using for years.
Luckily the monitor comes with a dual-link cable so just hooking that one up should do the trick.
Alternatively (and if possible, my suggestion as well) use a DisplayPort cable.
I had this problem myself, and it was indeed due to not using a DVI dual link cable. And on top of that, the first videocard I tried on didn't support the resolution 2560x1440, but that was at work just to test. At home, I thought to make it quick and just replaced my monitor, and kept the cable I was using for years.
Luckily the monitor comes with a dual-link cable so just hooking that one up should do the trick.
Alternatively (and if possible, my suggestion as well) use a DisplayPort cable.
answered Apr 4 '14 at 17:43
LPChip
35k54983
35k54983
This did it for me, too.
– Marie. P.
Jan 14 '17 at 10:14
add a comment |
This did it for me, too.
– Marie. P.
Jan 14 '17 at 10:14
This did it for me, too.
– Marie. P.
Jan 14 '17 at 10:14
This did it for me, too.
– Marie. P.
Jan 14 '17 at 10:14
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I have a u2713hm and had the same problem. I am using a DVI-D cable but it was a cheap one so have ordered something more premium, i'll try that when it arrives. In the meantime I managed to get a decent picture by going into the Nvidia control panel > change resolution > customise and dropped the refresh rate 1Hz at a time and testing the new setting. Eventually got a good picture at 40Hz, not perfect for gaming but fine for everything else.
GTX 550ti on Win 10, screen worked perfectly on Win 7 at 60Hz.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
I have a u2713hm and had the same problem. I am using a DVI-D cable but it was a cheap one so have ordered something more premium, i'll try that when it arrives. In the meantime I managed to get a decent picture by going into the Nvidia control panel > change resolution > customise and dropped the refresh rate 1Hz at a time and testing the new setting. Eventually got a good picture at 40Hz, not perfect for gaming but fine for everything else.
GTX 550ti on Win 10, screen worked perfectly on Win 7 at 60Hz.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
I have a u2713hm and had the same problem. I am using a DVI-D cable but it was a cheap one so have ordered something more premium, i'll try that when it arrives. In the meantime I managed to get a decent picture by going into the Nvidia control panel > change resolution > customise and dropped the refresh rate 1Hz at a time and testing the new setting. Eventually got a good picture at 40Hz, not perfect for gaming but fine for everything else.
GTX 550ti on Win 10, screen worked perfectly on Win 7 at 60Hz.
I have a u2713hm and had the same problem. I am using a DVI-D cable but it was a cheap one so have ordered something more premium, i'll try that when it arrives. In the meantime I managed to get a decent picture by going into the Nvidia control panel > change resolution > customise and dropped the refresh rate 1Hz at a time and testing the new setting. Eventually got a good picture at 40Hz, not perfect for gaming but fine for everything else.
GTX 550ti on Win 10, screen worked perfectly on Win 7 at 60Hz.
answered May 11 '16 at 17:56
jeremycharlesworth
111
111
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I had the exact same issue. Using a high-end 27-inch monitor I was getting that same blurry effect. By creating a custom resolution and reducing the refresh rate to 40 Hz was able to get a crisp clear picture.
However applications like Photoshop suffer when rendering, there is a noticeable delay. Can't have it all I guess.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I had the exact same issue. Using a high-end 27-inch monitor I was getting that same blurry effect. By creating a custom resolution and reducing the refresh rate to 40 Hz was able to get a crisp clear picture.
However applications like Photoshop suffer when rendering, there is a noticeable delay. Can't have it all I guess.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
I had the exact same issue. Using a high-end 27-inch monitor I was getting that same blurry effect. By creating a custom resolution and reducing the refresh rate to 40 Hz was able to get a crisp clear picture.
However applications like Photoshop suffer when rendering, there is a noticeable delay. Can't have it all I guess.
I had the exact same issue. Using a high-end 27-inch monitor I was getting that same blurry effect. By creating a custom resolution and reducing the refresh rate to 40 Hz was able to get a crisp clear picture.
However applications like Photoshop suffer when rendering, there is a noticeable delay. Can't have it all I guess.
edited Mar 23 '17 at 14:05
Christophe
1,1921027
1,1921027
answered Mar 17 '17 at 12:43
Leo
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I had the same problem with my u2711, i just bought used u2711 and find the very same problem, since i dont have any display port, i use hdmi and it can reach the highest resolution (with create new custom resolution) but it appears with blurry and un-crisp display, and i tried with cheap dvi-d dual link cable and again it can reach the highest resolution (native) but not even better, blurry just like pics above. But since i got a new hi-quality-premium dvi-d dual link cable and it makes the display can reach highest 2560 x 1440 native resolution with very amazing sharp, crisp and lovely display.
So in my case, the problem is the poor quality of the DVI-d Dual Link cable.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I had the same problem with my u2711, i just bought used u2711 and find the very same problem, since i dont have any display port, i use hdmi and it can reach the highest resolution (with create new custom resolution) but it appears with blurry and un-crisp display, and i tried with cheap dvi-d dual link cable and again it can reach the highest resolution (native) but not even better, blurry just like pics above. But since i got a new hi-quality-premium dvi-d dual link cable and it makes the display can reach highest 2560 x 1440 native resolution with very amazing sharp, crisp and lovely display.
So in my case, the problem is the poor quality of the DVI-d Dual Link cable.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
I had the same problem with my u2711, i just bought used u2711 and find the very same problem, since i dont have any display port, i use hdmi and it can reach the highest resolution (with create new custom resolution) but it appears with blurry and un-crisp display, and i tried with cheap dvi-d dual link cable and again it can reach the highest resolution (native) but not even better, blurry just like pics above. But since i got a new hi-quality-premium dvi-d dual link cable and it makes the display can reach highest 2560 x 1440 native resolution with very amazing sharp, crisp and lovely display.
So in my case, the problem is the poor quality of the DVI-d Dual Link cable.
I had the same problem with my u2711, i just bought used u2711 and find the very same problem, since i dont have any display port, i use hdmi and it can reach the highest resolution (with create new custom resolution) but it appears with blurry and un-crisp display, and i tried with cheap dvi-d dual link cable and again it can reach the highest resolution (native) but not even better, blurry just like pics above. But since i got a new hi-quality-premium dvi-d dual link cable and it makes the display can reach highest 2560 x 1440 native resolution with very amazing sharp, crisp and lovely display.
So in my case, the problem is the poor quality of the DVI-d Dual Link cable.
answered Mar 30 '17 at 7:55
Deemka
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
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I fixed the images you posted, but what exactly do they indicate? You've given no context for the pictures so they're really not too helpful.
– Moses
Nov 25 '13 at 21:24
Thank you !!! but at the end of the first paragraph says: "But The monitor only reaches 1680x1050. If I use a higher resolution all the screen looks scramble (like the image below)"
– EdurdoRG
Nov 25 '13 at 22:22
Ahh. I did not catch that part, my mistake.
– Moses
Nov 26 '13 at 0:39