NVIDIA Pixel Clock Patcher
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11-07-2015, 09:43 PM
Post: #456
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RE: NVIDIA Pixel Clock Patcher
(11-07-2015 04:00 PM)niciuffo Wrote:This looks like a TV limitation. 164.9959 MHz should still work if it were a driver limitation.ToastyX Wrote:What happens when you try to go over 165 MHz? Is the driver not allowing it ("test failed" message) or is the TV not displaying it?When going over the 165MHz limit, the TV just displays this message: Adjust the refresh rate to fine tune the pixel clock. If you can get it to fail at around 164.98 MHz, then the TV has its own pixel clock limit. (11-07-2015 04:00 PM)niciuffo Wrote:It's probably a bug in the TV's firmware. The video card controls the resolution, so it would be obvious if the TV was not displaying the full resolution, especially with text.ToastyX Wrote:Those values are impossible because the total includes the active + front porch + sync width. It's probably reducing the sync width without telling you.That might be true. One thing I should note, which I found weird. This is the default resolution (1920x1080@60Hz), seen by the TV's OSD: (11-07-2015 04:00 PM)niciuffo Wrote:Don't set the values too low or the TV won't be able to handle them.ToastyX Wrote:The only way to reduce the pixel clock without reducing the refresh rate is to reduce the totals. The totals include the front porch and sync width, so reducing those might allow you to reduce the totals further.I tried reducing those values to 1, to remain within the 165MHz limit, and the max stable refresh rate was 77Hz I think. It was very unstable though, every ~15 seconds the TV would display a black screen for a couple of seconds. 77 Hz is possible with these values: H: 1920 8 16 1960 V: 1080 3 5 1093 75 Hz is possible with these values: H: 1920 24 32 2008 V: 1080 3 5 1093 |
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