F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Problem with dual monitors setup.

Problem with dual monitors setup.

Problem with dual monitors setup.

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Pickkson
Member
174
07-10-2016, 05:42 AM
#1
I previously posted about this but discovered new findings. I’m testing an LG 29-inch ultrawide via DisplayPort and a budget Asus VSG monitor from years ago connected through DVI to my 1050ti. The problem is that both monitors function when only one is active, but the DVI monitor briefly shows signal for a few seconds before going black. Sometimes it restarts, other times I have to disconnect and reconnect. Selecting just the DVI monitor seems to resolve it until I turn off my PC, after which it returns. I’m unsure what’s causing it—do you have any suggestions?
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Pickkson
07-10-2016, 05:42 AM #1

I previously posted about this but discovered new findings. I’m testing an LG 29-inch ultrawide via DisplayPort and a budget Asus VSG monitor from years ago connected through DVI to my 1050ti. The problem is that both monitors function when only one is active, but the DVI monitor briefly shows signal for a few seconds before going black. Sometimes it restarts, other times I have to disconnect and reconnect. Selecting just the DVI monitor seems to resolve it until I turn off my PC, after which it returns. I’m unsure what’s causing it—do you have any suggestions?

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fayjaiKyle
Junior Member
24
07-15-2016, 09:21 AM
#2
Yeah, the 1050ti isn’t very strong. It should handle both 2D content well, but 3D would really take it over. 3D would probably only work on a smaller screen. Calling it “ultra wide” just means a bigger display. A “1440p ultrawide” usually translates to around 4K in actual resolution and specs. The whole “p” reference implies a certain aspect ratio, which breaks down if you throw it away.
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fayjaiKyle
07-15-2016, 09:21 AM #2

Yeah, the 1050ti isn’t very strong. It should handle both 2D content well, but 3D would really take it over. 3D would probably only work on a smaller screen. Calling it “ultra wide” just means a bigger display. A “1440p ultrawide” usually translates to around 4K in actual resolution and specs. The whole “p” reference implies a certain aspect ratio, which breaks down if you throw it away.