1280x720 75Hz not filling in the whole screen

Gabriel Goldberg

Commendable
Mar 24, 2016
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Hello, my name is Gabriel.


Recently I found out the resolutions my monitor can support 75Hz on, and the only one I want to use is 1280x720. Generally I would use 1280x720 60Hz, (instead of 1080p because it is a bit laggy in games) but I realized I can use 75Hz to make it look way smoother. The only problem is, whenever I use 75Hz as an option, it makes my screen get big black bars surrounding it. When I use 60Hz, it's fine and has no black lines/bars. Is there anyway I can get rid of the black bars when using 75Hz? Thank you!
 
Solution
Oh, integrated video. I think that is a function of the iGPU. The vertical refresh rate of the iGPU may only be 60Hz native.
What told you the refresh rate was 75Hz? And was that the monitor or the iGPU that was 75Hz capable?

Gabriel Goldberg

Commendable
Mar 24, 2016
9
0
1,510


Intel integrated.

These are my graphics specs right now.
Monitor
Name BenQ RL2455 on Intel HD Graphics 4600
Current Resolution 1280x720 pixels
Work Resolution 1280x680 pixels
State Enabled, Primary, Output devices support, Unsafe
Monitor Width 1280
Monitor Height 720
Monitor BPP 32 bits per pixel
Monitor Frequency 60 Hz
Device \\.\DISPLAY1\Monitor0
Intel HD Graphics 4600
Manufacturer Intel
Model HD Graphics 4600
Device ID 8086-0412
Revision 7
Subvendor Dell (1028)
Current Performance Level Level 0
Technology 22 nm
Driver version 20.19.15.4331
Count of performance levels : 1
Level 1 - "Perf Level 0"
GPU Clock 598 MHz
 

clutchc

Titan
Ambassador
Oh, integrated video. I think that is a function of the iGPU. The vertical refresh rate of the iGPU may only be 60Hz native.
What told you the refresh rate was 75Hz? And was that the monitor or the iGPU that was 75Hz capable?
 
Solution

clutchc

Titan
Ambassador


Yeah, I'm pretty sure the Intel HD Graphics 4600 is limited to 60Hz vertical refresh rate. You probably saw the monitor's refresh rate and when switching to 75 Hz, the iGPU had to "adapt" to something it can't produce. The result is a smaller display with fewer pixels to render per frame. Hence the better fps performance resulting in smoother graphics.
 

Gabriel Goldberg

Commendable
Mar 24, 2016
9
0
1,510


So it is not possible to fix, correct? Thank you, also
 

Gabriel Goldberg

Commendable
Mar 24, 2016
9
0
1,510

No, but thanks!

 

clutchc

Titan
Ambassador
I wouldn't get too concerned over the 60Hz vs 75Hz. The BenQ RL2455HM is only a 60 Hz vertical refresh panel anyway if this is your monitor: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/10/benqs-rl2455hm-gaming-monitor-cranks-up-response-time-to-1ms/
So you may have only been imagining you were seeing a difference.
 

Gabriel Goldberg

Commendable
Mar 24, 2016
9
0
1,510


Ah, okay. Thanks for your help.