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  • I think the issue is normally that the monitor isn't being identified correctly (that's the EDID information, I spent a while pissing about with this when I was using a HDMI switch).

    You can try installing a different monitor driver. In control panel try selecting the display (something like generic monitor) right click -> update driver software -> browse my computer -> pick from a list -> select something like digital flat panel

    There is another more convoluted option of capturing the monitor's EDID info and then writing this to registry and .inf file but that was a real ballache.

    It all seemed to work fine under Win 10.

  • Cheers.

    Had a tweak, but to no avail.

    However I did find a program that could read the EDID and I'm getting the monitor's maximum resolution and refresh rate via VGA.

    So I'm not sure I'd gain much with DVI.

    Not enough to justify the getting into the registry at any rate.

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