It is a 24" widescreen monitor, with a tp resolution of 1920x1200.
The problem is that I cannot get the 1920x1200 screen mode. It is not shown in screen mode prefs no matter what I do. The highest mode I can use is 1680x1050. I have even deleted some tooltypes to see if there was a limit on the maximum number of modes allowed.
Looking for the 9200SE specs, I see from This site that the refresh rate for 1920x1200 resolution is 100mhz. The monitors manual says it supports this res at 60mhz.
Any clues anyone. The big foot note! : 16:9 aspect ratio monitors are supported on 1920x1080 and 848x480 on Microsoft? Windows? XP, Microsoft? Windows? 2000 and Microsoft? Windows? Me. The complete list of resolutions depends on the driver version and operating system. NOTE: resolutions are limited by the performance of the attached monitor. DVI-I monitors will be limited to 1600x1200.
The LG website says: CERTIFIED FOR WINDOWS VISTA? This FLATRON monitor is Certified for Windows Vista and complements the new look of the innovative operating system.
Sorry no no mention of Amiga OS4.1 certification!!!
You have set HSYNCMAX=70000 but 1200*60=72000 (bare minimum without sync signals) so OS4 thinks your Monitor is not capable for the resolution and will not display it.
According to the VESA COORDINATED VIDEO TIMING:
HOR PIXELS 1.920 PIXELS
VER PIXELS 1.200 LINES
HOR FREQUENCY 74,556 kHz
ACTUAL VER FREQUENCY 59,885 Hz
PIXEL CLOCK 193,250 MHz
Reduced Blanking:
HOR PIXELS 1.920 PIXELS
VER PIXELS 1.200 LINES
HOR FREQUENCY 74,038 kHz
ACTUAL VER FREQUENCY 59,950 Hz
PIXEL CLOCK 154,000 MHz
You have set HSYNCMAX=70000 but 1200*60=72000 (bare minimum without sync signals) so OS4 thinks your Monitor is not capable for the resolution and will not display it.
Thanks for that. Using those settings 1920x1200 shows in screenmode prefs, but I get a 4:3 screen rather than 16:10.
Swoop wrote: Looking for the 9200SE specs, I see from This site that the refresh rate for 1920x1200 resolution is 100mhz. The monitors manual says it supports this res at 60mhz.
Any clues anyone.
100MHz is the maximum resolution, I'm sure it can go as low as 60 at the same res. As you see the higher the resolution , the lower is the max. refresh rate. It is relevant to CRT displays only.
Anyway, good to see that all's well. Enjoy the real estate on your desk
"the expression, 'atonal music,' is most unfortunate--it is on a par with calling flying 'the art of not falling,' or swimming 'the art of not drowning.'. A. Schoenberg