F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Not possible to achieve 4K60fps via HDMI (7. Gen. Intel).

Not possible to achieve 4K60fps via HDMI (7. Gen. Intel).

Not possible to achieve 4K60fps via HDMI (7. Gen. Intel).

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Samara2005
Member
151
03-19-2024, 12:31 PM
#1
I assemble a HTPC using a Pentium G4560 (back then I had a 1080p TV). Intel writes (at ARK): The highest resolution supported is HDMI 4096x2304 at 24Hz, DP up to 4096x2304 at 60Hz, and eDP at 4096x2304 at 60Hz. The motherboard only offers HDMI and DVI-D, not DP.
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Samara2005
03-19-2024, 12:31 PM #1

I assemble a HTPC using a Pentium G4560 (back then I had a 1080p TV). Intel writes (at ARK): The highest resolution supported is HDMI 4096x2304 at 24Hz, DP up to 4096x2304 at 60Hz, and eDP at 4096x2304 at 60Hz. The motherboard only offers HDMI and DVI-D, not DP.

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mcfarlin
Member
78
03-24-2024, 04:18 AM
#2
The HDMI version used for that era was HDMI 1.4b, which only allowed 4K at 24Hz. Upgrading to HDMI 2.0 is necessary for 60Hz. This restriction comes from the HDMI standard itself, not from the graphics card capabilities.
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mcfarlin
03-24-2024, 04:18 AM #2

The HDMI version used for that era was HDMI 1.4b, which only allowed 4K at 24Hz. Upgrading to HDMI 2.0 is necessary for 60Hz. This restriction comes from the HDMI standard itself, not from the graphics card capabilities.

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MetaKnight42
Junior Member
13
04-13-2024, 02:06 PM
#3
It's puzzling why the older GTX 660 and GTX 750 Ti can handle 4K60 on HDMI smoothly.
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MetaKnight42
04-13-2024, 02:06 PM #3

It's puzzling why the older GTX 660 and GTX 750 Ti can handle 4K60 on HDMI smoothly.

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DaDoxOP
Junior Member
41
04-14-2024, 01:05 PM
#4
In short, Nvidia was found to have misled consumers:
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DaDoxOP
04-14-2024, 01:05 PM #4

In short, Nvidia was found to have misled consumers:

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clix800
Member
122
04-14-2024, 02:47 PM
#5
No, you can't achieve 4K60 without a platform switch since your GPU isn't an option.
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clix800
04-14-2024, 02:47 PM #5

No, you can't achieve 4K60 without a platform switch since your GPU isn't an option.

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Thelo58
Member
190
04-14-2024, 04:44 PM
#6
No, it requires chroma subsampling.
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Thelo58
04-14-2024, 04:44 PM #6

No, it requires chroma subsampling.

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thehaperguy
Junior Member
16
04-18-2024, 09:25 AM
#7
The devices available for the whole generation are constrained, so yes. You might check for a chroma subsampling solution from Intel, but without it, you're limited.
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thehaperguy
04-18-2024, 09:25 AM #7

The devices available for the whole generation are constrained, so yes. You might check for a chroma subsampling solution from Intel, but without it, you're limited.