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Originally posted by: Blazer7
Mr cdfire,
I know that this post comes may-be too late but you may be interested to know that you are not the only one that had this Hz experience with your monitor. I had a similar experience with mine also (LG L1980Q).
My monitor can do 60 when Digital connection is used (DVI) & 75 when analog is used. At some time XP reported that I was doing 75 when digital which was quite odd. As the monitor?s specs are for 60 I was more than sure that something was wrong. To fix that I had to remove nvidia?s drivers & also the monitor from the device list. After reinstalling the monitor?s drivers and nvidia?s latest everything worked fine. My understanding is that, may-be, at some point I switched from analog to digital and the 75 value remained in the system. This could have been due to a driver or OS issue. After all, this kind of things are not unheard-of.
In order to be sure that the monitor & VGA were completely removed from the system I used HP?s System diagnostics utility as this seems to be able to remove keys from the registry that may have been left there even after a device has been ?removed?. This utility is also able to remove registry keys that are left in the system by previous devices that have been replaced by new ones (like cpus, VGAs, monitors etc). You can find this utility easily in HP?s site.
As for the 75Hz many believe that this is a must. This is primarily because it is common knowledge that the human eye ?operates? at ~72, so when doing more everything appears stable (flicker-free).
When talking about CRT monitor?s I couldn?t agree more. You can test it yourself. Find a CRT (if possible

) and set it below 72. You?ll most certainly see some difference. But this is hardly the case with modern TFT?s. Many of the TFT?s out there, don?t do more than 60 when in native resolution. And this is almost the rule when dealing with notebooks, but still, they don't suffer from this kind of problems.
Like Smitty I believe that there is nothing wrong with your hardware. In any case if you are not happy with your monitor, then listen to the Beagle?s advise. If I was to change my monitor now, and Hz was a factor, I would most certainly go for something that can do no less than 75 at the monitor's native res while connected to DVI.
I hope this helps.
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GA-N680SLI-DQ6 rev 1- BIOS F5b
C2D E6600@stock
4x 1GB DDR2-1066@4-3-3-5-2T
ASUS EN8800GTX - 768MB - 158.22
LG 1980Q
WinXP SP2
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I must have misread the View Sonic Specs, but I could have sworn it said default 60 yet it supports 75. Like I said I ran it at 75 for months, not only on this pc but on my old pc.
In any event, on this Samsung 906BW, with the latest Monitor Drivers, it defaults to 75Hz right off the bat even though Samsung recommends 60, it does state it supports 75, in fact unlike the View Sonic where 75 was hidden, the Samsung shows 3 refresh rates to chose from without un-checking the hide non supported box in display properties. Every thing runs great again. I have not had one issue (Knock On Wood) since installing the Samsung monitor, so I am pretty sure that View Sonic just could not handle it any more or like you said maybe a clean install of drivers was needed, but I did format several times with the same issue.
I know what you mean about CRT and refresh rate. The thing is I can also tell a big difference between 60 and 75 on a LCD. For one, things are brighter and colors in games are much better. Also in games, it seems to me at 75 things are much clearer and smoother. As for desktop and web, I really don't notice much difference between 60 and 75. It may be a personal taste type thing, but 75 just seem to work better for me.
Anyways, thanks for the reply. I love these forums and the good people here. It?s unlike any I have visited before. Good to be here and sharing and helping with info with everyone.