F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Where to plug a monitor

Where to plug a monitor

Where to plug a monitor

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OzoneSkill
Junior Member
33
03-10-2016, 09:49 AM
#1
Hey there! When I first set up my PC, only the second monitor was at 640x480 resolution. After some troubleshooting and changing cables, I thought the HDMI→DP cable might be faulty. Since I couldn’t afford a backup, I went to a store expecting a much higher price than Amazon. Instead, I used a spare HDMI cable and connected the monitors to the motherboard’s HDMI port. It worked perfectly—resolution matched exactly. My GPU and CPU behavior stayed normal.

What I noticed was that no extra power was drawn, and CPU usage didn’t change noticeably. So... what’s happening? I saw advice suggesting direct GPU connections for better performance, but it seems my setup handled everything fine without issues.
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OzoneSkill
03-10-2016, 09:49 AM #1

Hey there! When I first set up my PC, only the second monitor was at 640x480 resolution. After some troubleshooting and changing cables, I thought the HDMI→DP cable might be faulty. Since I couldn’t afford a backup, I went to a store expecting a much higher price than Amazon. Instead, I used a spare HDMI cable and connected the monitors to the motherboard’s HDMI port. It worked perfectly—resolution matched exactly. My GPU and CPU behavior stayed normal.

What I noticed was that no extra power was drawn, and CPU usage didn’t change noticeably. So... what’s happening? I saw advice suggesting direct GPU connections for better performance, but it seems my setup handled everything fine without issues.

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Rosie_The_Fox
Member
213
03-26-2016, 02:20 AM
#2
You can utilize the onboard graphics for an extra display, that’s perfectly fine. "I see everywhere that you should definitely connect the monitors directly to the GPU, otherwise you’d face low resolution, inefficiencies, and more." You’ve had to travel to many places I haven’t, because I’ve never come across that advice before. Perhaps it was intended for gaming?
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Rosie_The_Fox
03-26-2016, 02:20 AM #2

You can utilize the onboard graphics for an extra display, that’s perfectly fine. "I see everywhere that you should definitely connect the monitors directly to the GPU, otherwise you’d face low resolution, inefficiencies, and more." You’ve had to travel to many places I haven’t, because I’ve never come across that advice before. Perhaps it was intended for gaming?

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twhitford
Member
117
04-03-2016, 12:33 AM
#3
It seems the APU is taking charge with the second monitor, or maybe the GPU simply follows instructions from the motherboard.
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twhitford
04-03-2016, 12:33 AM #3

It seems the APU is taking charge with the second monitor, or maybe the GPU simply follows instructions from the motherboard.