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Hardware
Hardware Troubleshooting
Help on Zenith Monitor driver Issue
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<blockquote data-quote="Hangtooth" data-source="post: 461540" data-attributes="member: 46277"><p>And it could also be cable issues: <a href="http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/id-2265838/screen-resolution-issue-generic-pnp-monitor.html" target="_blank">http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/id-2265838/screen-resolution-issue-generic-pnp-monitor.html</a></p><p></p><p>Maybe your cable has an extension on it or just plain isn't connected tightly? I know, grasping at straws now but to sum, it could be your video card driver, it could be the cable connecting your monitor keeping your video card drivers from recognizing and properly setting the resolution for the monitor, and it *could* be lack of a driver for that specific monitor, but I do not think so.</p><p></p><p>It's that 'non-pnp monitor' windows is seeing that worries me. Unless you're using an ancient CRT I thought they were all plug and play. That's why I figure it's more likely video driver or cabling issues. You specify that it is an LCD.</p><p></p><p>There's good tips in the thread linked how on setting custom resolutions with your video card driver configuration tool, but it looks like you tried that too. They specifically talk about nvidia but I would assume radeon has much the same capability.</p><p></p><p>If none of this helps I'd try googling "windows non-pnp monitor" and you'll see lots of people with similar problems and solutions.</p><p></p><p>Sorry if you're still broken after a DDU clean install of video drivers and checking all the cabling and connections.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hangtooth, post: 461540, member: 46277"] And it could also be cable issues: [URL]http://www.tomshardware.com/forum/id-2265838/screen-resolution-issue-generic-pnp-monitor.html[/URL] Maybe your cable has an extension on it or just plain isn't connected tightly? I know, grasping at straws now but to sum, it could be your video card driver, it could be the cable connecting your monitor keeping your video card drivers from recognizing and properly setting the resolution for the monitor, and it *could* be lack of a driver for that specific monitor, but I do not think so. It's that 'non-pnp monitor' windows is seeing that worries me. Unless you're using an ancient CRT I thought they were all plug and play. That's why I figure it's more likely video driver or cabling issues. You specify that it is an LCD. There's good tips in the thread linked how on setting custom resolutions with your video card driver configuration tool, but it looks like you tried that too. They specifically talk about nvidia but I would assume radeon has much the same capability. If none of this helps I'd try googling "windows non-pnp monitor" and you'll see lots of people with similar problems and solutions. Sorry if you're still broken after a DDU clean install of video drivers and checking all the cabling and connections. [/QUOTE]
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