Forum Discussion
@graceymanors The dxdiag says the video card is set to 1080p at 60 Hz but the monitor is 144 Hz. You say the frame rate is capped (60 Hz?). Try uncapping the frame rate and see if that helps.
- graceymanors5 years agoLegend
Nvidia customer support told me to switch it from 60 to 144 and I tried that but it didn’t work.I originally had it set to 60fp I don’t like it any higher than that.i will try uncapping.I was always told to cap it as high FPS can ruin the card
- puzzlezaddict5 years agoHero+
@graceymanors You could also try an fps limit of 72, but both that and 60 should be supported on a 144 Hz monitor.
I mentioned it in a PM a while back, and again earlier this week... or at least I pressed send, but it looks now like the PM didn't go through. (My browser was being weird that day, and it was after midnight and I didn't feel like troubleshooting. Sorry for that.) Is your monitor plugged into the graphics card specifically, and not the motherboard? If you're repeatedly plugging it into the board, that could explain why all three computers had graphics anomalies. Even though the signal still gets through, it's not going to work as well as letting the card communicate directly with the monitor.
If this isn't the issue, please try plugging the computer into a different power outlet in a different room, at least long enough to test.
- graceymanors5 years agoLegend
I'm pretty certain its not plugged into the motherboard.I thought the same, but the cords only fit into one spot.Here's how I have it plugged in.
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