When no monitor connect , the resolution can only be 1920 * 1080 in 30hz?












5














I am using windows 7, and ati 7850 display card.



I would like to use the computer without monitor , and when I use teamviewer to control it, I found that the monitor detect is VGA , and the maximum resolution is 1600 * 1200 (60hz) or 1920 * 1080 (30hz).



Any idea about this? Since when I would like to use steam for game streaming it only let me select the 1600 * 1200, and there is no 1920 * 1080 choice, therefore, how can I set 1920 * 1080 60hz without monitor?



Thanks










share|improve this question


















  • 1




    That's odd. It shouldn't detect a display at all. What are you using for game streaming?
    – Journeyman Geek
    Jul 1 '15 at 5:03










  • steam but I dobut it is related as the main problem is can not set the display to 1920 * 1080 * 60hz
    – user782104
    Jul 1 '15 at 5:18










  • follow this? but seems quite complicated ehow.com/how_7649449_add-custom-resolution-ati.html
    – user782104
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:31










  • I don't think that the monitor being present or not is significant. If you connect a monitor, what is the maximum resolution allowed? Have you looked in Windows Update, optional section, for updates to the video driver? You could also check the dricer using the AMD Driver Autodetect.
    – harrymc
    Jul 3 '15 at 16:06










  • thanks. when I connect the monitor , the ati panel setting has a hdtv option and I can select the 1080p
    – user782104
    Jul 4 '15 at 4:17
















5














I am using windows 7, and ati 7850 display card.



I would like to use the computer without monitor , and when I use teamviewer to control it, I found that the monitor detect is VGA , and the maximum resolution is 1600 * 1200 (60hz) or 1920 * 1080 (30hz).



Any idea about this? Since when I would like to use steam for game streaming it only let me select the 1600 * 1200, and there is no 1920 * 1080 choice, therefore, how can I set 1920 * 1080 60hz without monitor?



Thanks










share|improve this question


















  • 1




    That's odd. It shouldn't detect a display at all. What are you using for game streaming?
    – Journeyman Geek
    Jul 1 '15 at 5:03










  • steam but I dobut it is related as the main problem is can not set the display to 1920 * 1080 * 60hz
    – user782104
    Jul 1 '15 at 5:18










  • follow this? but seems quite complicated ehow.com/how_7649449_add-custom-resolution-ati.html
    – user782104
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:31










  • I don't think that the monitor being present or not is significant. If you connect a monitor, what is the maximum resolution allowed? Have you looked in Windows Update, optional section, for updates to the video driver? You could also check the dricer using the AMD Driver Autodetect.
    – harrymc
    Jul 3 '15 at 16:06










  • thanks. when I connect the monitor , the ati panel setting has a hdtv option and I can select the 1080p
    – user782104
    Jul 4 '15 at 4:17














5












5








5


1





I am using windows 7, and ati 7850 display card.



I would like to use the computer without monitor , and when I use teamviewer to control it, I found that the monitor detect is VGA , and the maximum resolution is 1600 * 1200 (60hz) or 1920 * 1080 (30hz).



Any idea about this? Since when I would like to use steam for game streaming it only let me select the 1600 * 1200, and there is no 1920 * 1080 choice, therefore, how can I set 1920 * 1080 60hz without monitor?



Thanks










share|improve this question













I am using windows 7, and ati 7850 display card.



I would like to use the computer without monitor , and when I use teamviewer to control it, I found that the monitor detect is VGA , and the maximum resolution is 1600 * 1200 (60hz) or 1920 * 1080 (30hz).



Any idea about this? Since when I would like to use steam for game streaming it only let me select the 1600 * 1200, and there is no 1920 * 1080 choice, therefore, how can I set 1920 * 1080 60hz without monitor?



Thanks







windows-7 graphics-card resolution vga






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jul 1 '15 at 4:49









user782104

8919




8919








  • 1




    That's odd. It shouldn't detect a display at all. What are you using for game streaming?
    – Journeyman Geek
    Jul 1 '15 at 5:03










  • steam but I dobut it is related as the main problem is can not set the display to 1920 * 1080 * 60hz
    – user782104
    Jul 1 '15 at 5:18










  • follow this? but seems quite complicated ehow.com/how_7649449_add-custom-resolution-ati.html
    – user782104
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:31










  • I don't think that the monitor being present or not is significant. If you connect a monitor, what is the maximum resolution allowed? Have you looked in Windows Update, optional section, for updates to the video driver? You could also check the dricer using the AMD Driver Autodetect.
    – harrymc
    Jul 3 '15 at 16:06










  • thanks. when I connect the monitor , the ati panel setting has a hdtv option and I can select the 1080p
    – user782104
    Jul 4 '15 at 4:17














  • 1




    That's odd. It shouldn't detect a display at all. What are you using for game streaming?
    – Journeyman Geek
    Jul 1 '15 at 5:03










  • steam but I dobut it is related as the main problem is can not set the display to 1920 * 1080 * 60hz
    – user782104
    Jul 1 '15 at 5:18










  • follow this? but seems quite complicated ehow.com/how_7649449_add-custom-resolution-ati.html
    – user782104
    Jul 2 '15 at 13:31










  • I don't think that the monitor being present or not is significant. If you connect a monitor, what is the maximum resolution allowed? Have you looked in Windows Update, optional section, for updates to the video driver? You could also check the dricer using the AMD Driver Autodetect.
    – harrymc
    Jul 3 '15 at 16:06










  • thanks. when I connect the monitor , the ati panel setting has a hdtv option and I can select the 1080p
    – user782104
    Jul 4 '15 at 4:17








1




1




That's odd. It shouldn't detect a display at all. What are you using for game streaming?
– Journeyman Geek
Jul 1 '15 at 5:03




That's odd. It shouldn't detect a display at all. What are you using for game streaming?
– Journeyman Geek
Jul 1 '15 at 5:03












steam but I dobut it is related as the main problem is can not set the display to 1920 * 1080 * 60hz
– user782104
Jul 1 '15 at 5:18




steam but I dobut it is related as the main problem is can not set the display to 1920 * 1080 * 60hz
– user782104
Jul 1 '15 at 5:18












follow this? but seems quite complicated ehow.com/how_7649449_add-custom-resolution-ati.html
– user782104
Jul 2 '15 at 13:31




follow this? but seems quite complicated ehow.com/how_7649449_add-custom-resolution-ati.html
– user782104
Jul 2 '15 at 13:31












I don't think that the monitor being present or not is significant. If you connect a monitor, what is the maximum resolution allowed? Have you looked in Windows Update, optional section, for updates to the video driver? You could also check the dricer using the AMD Driver Autodetect.
– harrymc
Jul 3 '15 at 16:06




I don't think that the monitor being present or not is significant. If you connect a monitor, what is the maximum resolution allowed? Have you looked in Windows Update, optional section, for updates to the video driver? You could also check the dricer using the AMD Driver Autodetect.
– harrymc
Jul 3 '15 at 16:06












thanks. when I connect the monitor , the ati panel setting has a hdtv option and I can select the 1080p
– user782104
Jul 4 '15 at 4:17




thanks. when I connect the monitor , the ati panel setting has a hdtv option and I can select the 1080p
– user782104
Jul 4 '15 at 4:17










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















5





+50









Are you connecting a monitor or a TV?



Below are some methods that could perhaps solve the problem,
singly or several together :



Method 1 : Use a tool to force the resolution



Here are some command line tools that can change the screen resolution :
QRes, NirCmd, Display Changer.



Method 2 : Registry updates



Search the registry for DefaultSettings.XResolution, DefaultSettings.YResolution and BitsPerPixel and change
to the desired resolution.



If necessary, add ColorDepth for RDP connection :




[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows NTTerminal Services]
"ColorDepth"=dword:00000003 in decimal.




More info can be found here.



Method 3 : Setting the video adapter to custom setting



If your VGA video driver has customizing software, you could do something similar to:



image



Method 4 : Use a fake video plug



If it becomes necessary to fool Windows into believing that a real
monitor is attached, see this tutorial on how to create such a plug using
a spare DVI-VGA adapter and three 68 ohm resistors:
The 30 Second Dummy Plug.



enter image description here



Method 5 : Use PowerStrip (shareware, $29.95)



The PowerStrip utility allows you to gain complete control over the video card.

For more details see :
Customize monitor resolution settings with PowerStrip.



image






share|improve this answer































    1














    here is a copy & paste form this form:



    First set desired resolution using:




    ControlPanel → Display → Screen Resolution.




    Also set ColorDepth using:




    ControlPanel→ Display → Screen Resolution → Advance Settings → Monitor → Color




    After this in regedit, manually search for DefaultSettings.XResolution, DefaultSettings.YResolution and BitsPerPixel and change all those to 1920, 1200, 16 (All in Decimal) respectively using next search button F3.

    I also added entry of ColorDepth for RDP connection(not mandatory)::




    [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows NTTerminal Services]
    "ColorDepth"=dword:00000003 in decimal.




    I don't know, which portion of registry did this, but now it works.






    share|improve this answer























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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      5





      +50









      Are you connecting a monitor or a TV?



      Below are some methods that could perhaps solve the problem,
      singly or several together :



      Method 1 : Use a tool to force the resolution



      Here are some command line tools that can change the screen resolution :
      QRes, NirCmd, Display Changer.



      Method 2 : Registry updates



      Search the registry for DefaultSettings.XResolution, DefaultSettings.YResolution and BitsPerPixel and change
      to the desired resolution.



      If necessary, add ColorDepth for RDP connection :




      [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows NTTerminal Services]
      "ColorDepth"=dword:00000003 in decimal.




      More info can be found here.



      Method 3 : Setting the video adapter to custom setting



      If your VGA video driver has customizing software, you could do something similar to:



      image



      Method 4 : Use a fake video plug



      If it becomes necessary to fool Windows into believing that a real
      monitor is attached, see this tutorial on how to create such a plug using
      a spare DVI-VGA adapter and three 68 ohm resistors:
      The 30 Second Dummy Plug.



      enter image description here



      Method 5 : Use PowerStrip (shareware, $29.95)



      The PowerStrip utility allows you to gain complete control over the video card.

      For more details see :
      Customize monitor resolution settings with PowerStrip.



      image






      share|improve this answer




























        5





        +50









        Are you connecting a monitor or a TV?



        Below are some methods that could perhaps solve the problem,
        singly or several together :



        Method 1 : Use a tool to force the resolution



        Here are some command line tools that can change the screen resolution :
        QRes, NirCmd, Display Changer.



        Method 2 : Registry updates



        Search the registry for DefaultSettings.XResolution, DefaultSettings.YResolution and BitsPerPixel and change
        to the desired resolution.



        If necessary, add ColorDepth for RDP connection :




        [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows NTTerminal Services]
        "ColorDepth"=dword:00000003 in decimal.




        More info can be found here.



        Method 3 : Setting the video adapter to custom setting



        If your VGA video driver has customizing software, you could do something similar to:



        image



        Method 4 : Use a fake video plug



        If it becomes necessary to fool Windows into believing that a real
        monitor is attached, see this tutorial on how to create such a plug using
        a spare DVI-VGA adapter and three 68 ohm resistors:
        The 30 Second Dummy Plug.



        enter image description here



        Method 5 : Use PowerStrip (shareware, $29.95)



        The PowerStrip utility allows you to gain complete control over the video card.

        For more details see :
        Customize monitor resolution settings with PowerStrip.



        image






        share|improve this answer


























          5





          +50







          5





          +50



          5




          +50




          Are you connecting a monitor or a TV?



          Below are some methods that could perhaps solve the problem,
          singly or several together :



          Method 1 : Use a tool to force the resolution



          Here are some command line tools that can change the screen resolution :
          QRes, NirCmd, Display Changer.



          Method 2 : Registry updates



          Search the registry for DefaultSettings.XResolution, DefaultSettings.YResolution and BitsPerPixel and change
          to the desired resolution.



          If necessary, add ColorDepth for RDP connection :




          [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows NTTerminal Services]
          "ColorDepth"=dword:00000003 in decimal.




          More info can be found here.



          Method 3 : Setting the video adapter to custom setting



          If your VGA video driver has customizing software, you could do something similar to:



          image



          Method 4 : Use a fake video plug



          If it becomes necessary to fool Windows into believing that a real
          monitor is attached, see this tutorial on how to create such a plug using
          a spare DVI-VGA adapter and three 68 ohm resistors:
          The 30 Second Dummy Plug.



          enter image description here



          Method 5 : Use PowerStrip (shareware, $29.95)



          The PowerStrip utility allows you to gain complete control over the video card.

          For more details see :
          Customize monitor resolution settings with PowerStrip.



          image






          share|improve this answer














          Are you connecting a monitor or a TV?



          Below are some methods that could perhaps solve the problem,
          singly or several together :



          Method 1 : Use a tool to force the resolution



          Here are some command line tools that can change the screen resolution :
          QRes, NirCmd, Display Changer.



          Method 2 : Registry updates



          Search the registry for DefaultSettings.XResolution, DefaultSettings.YResolution and BitsPerPixel and change
          to the desired resolution.



          If necessary, add ColorDepth for RDP connection :




          [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows NTTerminal Services]
          "ColorDepth"=dword:00000003 in decimal.




          More info can be found here.



          Method 3 : Setting the video adapter to custom setting



          If your VGA video driver has customizing software, you could do something similar to:



          image



          Method 4 : Use a fake video plug



          If it becomes necessary to fool Windows into believing that a real
          monitor is attached, see this tutorial on how to create such a plug using
          a spare DVI-VGA adapter and three 68 ohm resistors:
          The 30 Second Dummy Plug.



          enter image description here



          Method 5 : Use PowerStrip (shareware, $29.95)



          The PowerStrip utility allows you to gain complete control over the video card.

          For more details see :
          Customize monitor resolution settings with PowerStrip.



          image







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Jul 4 '15 at 10:59

























          answered Jul 4 '15 at 9:10









          harrymc

          252k12259560




          252k12259560

























              1














              here is a copy & paste form this form:



              First set desired resolution using:




              ControlPanel → Display → Screen Resolution.




              Also set ColorDepth using:




              ControlPanel→ Display → Screen Resolution → Advance Settings → Monitor → Color




              After this in regedit, manually search for DefaultSettings.XResolution, DefaultSettings.YResolution and BitsPerPixel and change all those to 1920, 1200, 16 (All in Decimal) respectively using next search button F3.

              I also added entry of ColorDepth for RDP connection(not mandatory)::




              [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows NTTerminal Services]
              "ColorDepth"=dword:00000003 in decimal.




              I don't know, which portion of registry did this, but now it works.






              share|improve this answer




























                1














                here is a copy & paste form this form:



                First set desired resolution using:




                ControlPanel → Display → Screen Resolution.




                Also set ColorDepth using:




                ControlPanel→ Display → Screen Resolution → Advance Settings → Monitor → Color




                After this in regedit, manually search for DefaultSettings.XResolution, DefaultSettings.YResolution and BitsPerPixel and change all those to 1920, 1200, 16 (All in Decimal) respectively using next search button F3.

                I also added entry of ColorDepth for RDP connection(not mandatory)::




                [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows NTTerminal Services]
                "ColorDepth"=dword:00000003 in decimal.




                I don't know, which portion of registry did this, but now it works.






                share|improve this answer


























                  1












                  1








                  1






                  here is a copy & paste form this form:



                  First set desired resolution using:




                  ControlPanel → Display → Screen Resolution.




                  Also set ColorDepth using:




                  ControlPanel→ Display → Screen Resolution → Advance Settings → Monitor → Color




                  After this in regedit, manually search for DefaultSettings.XResolution, DefaultSettings.YResolution and BitsPerPixel and change all those to 1920, 1200, 16 (All in Decimal) respectively using next search button F3.

                  I also added entry of ColorDepth for RDP connection(not mandatory)::




                  [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows NTTerminal Services]
                  "ColorDepth"=dword:00000003 in decimal.




                  I don't know, which portion of registry did this, but now it works.






                  share|improve this answer














                  here is a copy & paste form this form:



                  First set desired resolution using:




                  ControlPanel → Display → Screen Resolution.




                  Also set ColorDepth using:




                  ControlPanel→ Display → Screen Resolution → Advance Settings → Monitor → Color




                  After this in regedit, manually search for DefaultSettings.XResolution, DefaultSettings.YResolution and BitsPerPixel and change all those to 1920, 1200, 16 (All in Decimal) respectively using next search button F3.

                  I also added entry of ColorDepth for RDP connection(not mandatory)::




                  [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindows NTTerminal Services]
                  "ColorDepth"=dword:00000003 in decimal.




                  I don't know, which portion of registry did this, but now it works.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Mar 20 '17 at 10:17









                  Community

                  1




                  1










                  answered Jul 4 '15 at 23:12









                  Gman Smith

                  1,1232721




                  1,1232721






























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