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-   -   HDMI Monitor (https://www.cableforum.uk/board/showthread.php?t=33697294)

tizmeinnit 08-04-2014 21:33

Re: HDMI Monitor
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kabaal (Post 35687059)
AMD's CCC underscans by default with HDMI so the slider need moved 'up' to 0% manually. A combination of that and it not playing well with monitors that are set to AV instead of PC for their HDMI inputs (causes blurry text) which is often the default and you see the issues we've been talking about here. It's very very common with AMD, not an issue with Nvidia.

Had to google again just to remember what i had to do with mine.

^^^ this :)

you learn something new every day eh qas ;)

Ben B 08-04-2014 22:31

Re: HDMI Monitor
 
If you don't like CCC (I found it to slow down my PC) you can also disable overscan in the registry http://www.avsforum.com/t/1251639/ho...control-center

tizmeinnit 08-04-2014 22:44

Re: HDMI Monitor
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben B (Post 35687208)
If you don't like CCC (I found it to slow down my PC) you can also disable overscan in the registry http://www.avsforum.com/t/1251639/ho...control-center

can not be much of a pc then lol

Ben B 08-04-2014 22:47

Re: HDMI Monitor
 
Haha, either that or it was all in the mind, I have a tendency to get annoyed by things in the system tray. Have a laptop with both Intel HD and NVidia graphics now so it's all good

qasdfdsaq 08-04-2014 22:57

Re: HDMI Monitor
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Kabaal (Post 35687059)
AMD's CCC underscans by default with HDMI so the slider need moved 'up' to 0% manually. A combination of that and it not playing well with monitors that are set to AV instead of PC for their HDMI inputs (causes blurry text) which is often the default and you see the issues we've been talking about here. It's very very common with AMD, not an issue with Nvidia.

Had to google again just to remember what i had to do with mine.

I've used AMD-only cards with the full CCC suite for five years and it's never once defaulted to underscanning on any interface.

But by very definition if it's underscanning or overscanning it's not running on native.

tizmeinnit 08-04-2014 23:00

Re: HDMI Monitor
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by qasdfdsaq (Post 35687222)
I've used AMD-only cards with the full CCC suite for five years and it's never once defaulted to underscanning on any interface.

But by very definition if it's underscanning or overscanning it's not running on native.

how strange a 1080 screen set to 1080 screen does it then so obviously it does

Ben B 08-04-2014 23:28

Re: HDMI Monitor
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by qasdfdsaq (Post 35687222)
I've used AMD-only cards with the full CCC suite for five years and it's never once defaulted to underscanning on any interface

Maybe overscanning is turned on on your display so it's cancelling out the underscan :D

qasdfdsaq 09-04-2014 18:48

Re: HDMI Monitor
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by tizmeinnit (Post 35687223)
how strange a 1080 screen set to 1080 screen does it then so obviously it does

The fact that it was overscanning meant it was scaling it to a non-native resolution. That's what overscanning does...

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben B (Post 35687230)
Maybe overscanning is turned on on your display so it's cancelling out the underscan :D

It doesn't have any such option or capability. It's a digital display and all digital modes are purely 1:1. There's overscanning/underscanning available on analogue (VGA, Component, and Composite inputs) but not HDMI.

Ben B 09-04-2014 20:57

Re: HDMI Monitor
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by qasdfdsaq (Post 35687426)
It doesn't have any such option or capability. It's a digital display and all digital modes are purely 1:1. There's overscanning/underscanning available on analogue (VGA, Component, and Composite inputs) but not HDMI.

Strange, all my TVs have a 16:9 and Full setting on HDMI, the Full setting being the one without overscan

tizmeinnit 09-04-2014 21:09

Re: HDMI Monitor
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by qasdfdsaq (Post 35687426)
The fact that it was overscanning meant it was scaling it to a non-native resolution. That's what overscanning does...



It doesn't have any such option or capability. It's a digital display and all digital modes are purely 1:1. There's overscanning/underscanning available on analogue (VGA, Component, and Composite inputs) but not HDMI.

do not care what you say it still did it

dilli-theclaw 09-04-2014 21:35

Re: HDMI Monitor
 
3 Attachment(s)
Quote:

Originally Posted by qasdfdsaq (Post 35687426)
The fact that it was overscanning meant it was scaling it to a non-native resolution. That's what overscanning does...



It doesn't have any such option or capability. It's a digital display and all digital modes are purely 1:1. There's overscanning/underscanning available on analogue (VGA, Component, and Composite inputs) but not HDMI.

Maybe not on your display but overscan is an option on my HDMI screen.


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