F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Check if boosting the resolution and refresh rate poses any stability concerns.

Check if boosting the resolution and refresh rate poses any stability concerns.

Check if boosting the resolution and refresh rate poses any stability concerns.

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anonymousminer
Junior Member
8
08-11-2023, 08:47 AM
#1
Based on my brief investigation, a lower resolution at a higher refresh rate consumes less bandwidth compared to a higher resolution at a lower frame rate. Considering this, increasing the monitor's settings shouldn't be damaging, should it?
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anonymousminer
08-11-2023, 08:47 AM #1

Based on my brief investigation, a lower resolution at a higher refresh rate consumes less bandwidth compared to a higher resolution at a lower frame rate. Considering this, increasing the monitor's settings shouldn't be damaging, should it?

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vandalmal
Member
201
08-14-2023, 03:43 AM
#2
Does this work for today's LCD or LED monitors? I assumed they displayed at their original resolution regardless of input, adjusting only if the signal was meant for a lower resolution. I'm not very familiar with this, but I believed the idea of higher refresh rates was mainly relevant to CRTs, since these devices use a different technology and "native" resolution doesn't exist—they focus more on refresh speed than pixel count.
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vandalmal
08-14-2023, 03:43 AM #2

Does this work for today's LCD or LED monitors? I assumed they displayed at their original resolution regardless of input, adjusting only if the signal was meant for a lower resolution. I'm not very familiar with this, but I believed the idea of higher refresh rates was mainly relevant to CRTs, since these devices use a different technology and "native" resolution doesn't exist—they focus more on refresh speed than pixel count.

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Redz0ra
Member
91
08-14-2023, 12:11 PM
#3
No, let's give it another shot.
No proof of a broken monitor due to overclocking was found.
However, most monitors, including my own, can support higher refresh rates at lower resolutions—my own example is 720p at 75hz.
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Redz0ra
08-14-2023, 12:11 PM #3

No, let's give it another shot.
No proof of a broken monitor due to overclocking was found.
However, most monitors, including my own, can support higher refresh rates at lower resolutions—my own example is 720p at 75hz.

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huityweb
Member
157
08-14-2023, 12:36 PM
#4
Sure, let's aim for 1080p at 75 frames per second.
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huityweb
08-14-2023, 12:36 PM #4

Sure, let's aim for 1080p at 75 frames per second.

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galaxy13011
Junior Member
34
08-15-2023, 06:52 PM
#5
Does this work for today's LCD or LED screens? I assumed they displayed at their original resolution regardless of input, adjusting only if the signal was meant for a lower resolution. I'm not very familiar with this, but I believed the idea of higher refresh rates was mainly relevant to CRTs, since these devices use a different technology and "native" resolution doesn't exist—they focus more on refresh speed than pixel count.
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galaxy13011
08-15-2023, 06:52 PM #5

Does this work for today's LCD or LED screens? I assumed they displayed at their original resolution regardless of input, adjusting only if the signal was meant for a lower resolution. I'm not very familiar with this, but I believed the idea of higher refresh rates was mainly relevant to CRTs, since these devices use a different technology and "native" resolution doesn't exist—they focus more on refresh speed than pixel count.

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ImSwitchy
Junior Member
10
08-17-2023, 02:41 AM
#6
^ I think King has a point. I didn’t want to admit it because I wasn’t completely sure, but it’s nice someone else brought it up.
I don’t like seeing monitors at non-native resolutions. It looks like OP is trying to letterbox them, so the original native pixels are still there.
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ImSwitchy
08-17-2023, 02:41 AM #6

^ I think King has a point. I didn’t want to admit it because I wasn’t completely sure, but it’s nice someone else brought it up.
I don’t like seeing monitors at non-native resolutions. It looks like OP is trying to letterbox them, so the original native pixels are still there.

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Cableperson
Member
185
08-31-2023, 11:31 PM
#7
If my and @tennis2's ideas hold true, then even with a resolution of 1280x1024, the screen still shows 1920x1080, just leaving some pixels empty. If that's the case, then increasing the speed at lower resolution is essentially keeping it running at its original setting of 1920x1080. If my understanding is right, I wouldn't take any chances.
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Cableperson
08-31-2023, 11:31 PM #7

If my and @tennis2's ideas hold true, then even with a resolution of 1280x1024, the screen still shows 1920x1080, just leaving some pixels empty. If that's the case, then increasing the speed at lower resolution is essentially keeping it running at its original setting of 1920x1080. If my understanding is right, I wouldn't take any chances.