![]() ![]() I think you might be confusing your monitor's refresh rate with the refresh rate of the integrated GPU. Since I haven't done anything like this before on integrated graphics solutions, I wanted to check here first before I fry something. ![]() I was thinking about bumping up the refresh rate of the HD 530 integrated graphics on my i7-6700k to 72Hz (which is a refresh rate technically supported by my monitor). inf file? (Or is there a better method of doing this?) I guess this means we're getting into actual overclocking territory now! Is there anyone familiar with the EDID override process that could instruct me on which parameters I need to change for the new. ![]() inf file using the modified EDID, and update the driver Windows is using for the monitor handshake with the new. Someone more knowledgeable on this topic is welcome to chime in, but I think this means I have to capture my monitor's 256-byte EDID, modify a personally unknown parameter, create a new. The ugly news is that Intel's display drivers don't support overriding the monitor's EDID, so I can't use the Custom Resolution Utility or another tool that attempts to override the EDID by using the display driver. The bad news is that since 1920x1080 72Hz isn't officially supported by my monitor (the ASUS VN248H-P), I have to override the monitor's EDID, which is what the Custom Resolution Utility that nX3NTY posted is supposed to do. The good news is that outputting 1920x1080 72Hz isn't going to fry the HD 530 (as expected). ![]()
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