Istopmotion resolution not matching
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- #Istopmotion resolution not matching drivers
- #Istopmotion resolution not matching driver
- #Istopmotion resolution not matching windows
I started discussion space to continue this topic. Products: 7th Generation (Kaby Lake) - OS: Windows® 10 Products: 6th Generation (Skylake) - OS: Windows* 7, Windows* 8.1, Windows® 10
#Istopmotion resolution not matching driver
Download Intel® Graphics Driver for Windows* Products: 5th Generation (Broadwell) - OS: Windows* 7, Windows* 8.1, Windows® 10 Products: 4th Generation (Haswell) - OS: Windows® 10
#Istopmotion resolution not matching windows
Download Intel® Graphics Driver for Windows 7*/8.1* Products: 4th Generation (Haswell) - OS: Windows* 7, Windows* 8.1
#Istopmotion resolution not matching drivers
These drivers enable the use of 3rd party EDID applications for internal and external panels on Intel platforms. Great news! This completes the platform support. Please download the latest driver for your platform, or you can use iDSA to automatically detect what driver updates are available for your system. The drivers below are simply the first driver in each branch that were unlocked. *This change to unlock the drivers to allow 3rd party apps to function is checked into all branches of drivers, which means all 'latest' drivers are unlocked. Old title: Intel driver is completely broken (custom resolution) [Edit by Changed title to reflect investigation bug# and title. Refresh rate is a huge feature as evident on monitors getting released (like BenQ XL2430T, Asus ROG Swift, Acer Predator, etc.) and if you ask any gamer that has tried a high refresh rate monitor they will tell you how much big of a difference it is and because of this issue, any gaming laptop that has Hybrid graphics (Intel Graphics enabled) is a HUGE deal breaker. As an example the LCD panel found on Asus G751JM-BHI7T25 uses LG LP156WF4 SPL1 which is the exact same panel found on Asus G751JY that comes at 75Hz by default, but we cannot change the refresh rate due to broken Intel Custom Resolution even though the LCD panel itself is more than capable to handle it. So why does it matter? Almost every single gaming laptop that is being released are NVIDIA Optimus Enabled (Hybrid Graphics where Intel Graphics is handling the display) and it prevents people from changing the refresh rate of the display. In fact if you verify the problem by testing it on ANY laptop that has an Intel graphics and try to create a custom resolution that is 1Hz less than native (like 59Hz) and it will give you the same error. The problem is NOT ISOLATED on a laptop model or a manufacturer but the Intel Graphics driver itself. I tried the oldest and newest driver from the OEM and the one on Intel website and they are all broken. To test it further I downscale the resolution to 1600x900 59Hz and it still gives the error so I conclude the problem is with the driver itself. To establish the fact that bandwidth is not the problem, I tried creating a custom resolution at native res (1920x1080) at 59Hz (default is 60Hz) and it says custom resolution exceeds the maximum bandwidth capacity. I tested it on many different laptop with eDP (embedded displayport) like Alienware 17, Asus G751JM, Asus Q551LN, Lenovo Y50-70, Razer Blade 14, MSI GT60 Dominator Pro, and Gigabyte P34 and they all say custom resolution exceeds the maximum bandwidth capacity. No matter what setting you put into it, it will always custom resolution exceeds the maximum bandwidth capacity. The problem is Intel Graphics driver for HD 4600 (and presumably others too) have a broken custom resolution for Built in LCD. I emailed Intel Customer Support Service and they refer me to this forum because the agent say it will have the correct exposure to intel engineering department.