Dvi From Gpu Audio From Cpu

2020. 1. 24. 07:22카테고리 없음

Dvi From Gpu Audio From Cpu
  1. Dvi From Gpu Audio From Cpu To Usb

New graphics card - now I can't use motherboard hdmi Nvidia quadro k620 graphics card Killer Fatal1ty z97 mother board with onboard hdmi Ok, so Im extremely new to the tech world, and I just built my first computer. I've been using my tv as my monitor via my hdmi cable. I plugged in my graphics card to my pcie slot and then my hdmi wouldn't. This is an older thread but there is so much wrong information here that I was compelled to write a response for future readers. If your system has a dedicated GPU then you should be using those ports and not your motherboard’s ports.

I have a computer built with an MSI X79a-GD45 Plus. I have an i7 3820 CPU, 16Gb of memory, a GTX960 video card. I'm running Windows 7.I've had a history of problems with this unit. All parts have been replaced except the motherboard so I suspect it.I've had a history of posting problems-getting images out to my projector through this computer. I've run a GTX 680, GTX 760, an HD 6850 an R9280X. I would have posting errors until I would replace the card. It was intermittent.

The motherboard did seem to handle the AMD offerings better than Nvidia. I have tried different power supplies, different HDMI cables and different combinations.I was running well with the R9 280X but switched over to the GTX960 due to the onboard HEVC decoding (this was before the AMD 3 series was out.) It has been performing fine, posting everytime and playing videos without problems.Last week we had several power outages.

I had it hooked up to a surge suppressor, but that doesn't stop it from having issues due to sudden loss of power. Since then, I have been completely unable to get a signal out of the HDMI port. I have cleared CMOS several times.I assumed the system wasn't posting, till I brought an old monitor from upstairs that had a VGA end. I attached a VGA to DVI adapter to it and turned on the monitor and it had the screen waiting for me to enter BIOS.

Dvi

I entered then closed BIOS and rebooted. It rebooted and showed a picture on the DVI connected monitor. The system wouldn't recognize the Sony Projector or the Denon AVR connected via HDMI.I tried replacing the HDMI cable, going directly to the projector as opposed to the AVR, even unplugging the DVI cable hoping that the card would recognize the HDMI device as it was the only one connected. It still didn't work. Is there any help?

Guys i need answers, pleasenow i've been googling this for quite a while now and it sounds pretty interestingi've found a handful of posts of people saying that they are able to get audio on their tv's/monitors while their only connected to a single dvi cablefrom their gpu. In those posts i also saw people saying that later ati and nvidia crads support audio through dvi, and some people say its completely impossible to get audio through a dvi cable.So, i need an answer from you tomshardware readers and writers, IS IT TRUE THAT TODAYS GPU'S ARE ABLE TO PIPE AUDIO THROUGH THEIR DVI CONNECTORS AND CABLES AND OUTPUT THE AUDIO ONTO A HDTV SPEAKER OR SIMILAR? (e.g, ati/amd - HD 6800/6900 series, nvidia - GeForce 400/500 series).

I have a nvidia 470gtx and i'm using a dvi-to-hdmi cable. I currently have it connected to an av receiver and i get great sound. Yes, only one cable.what i understand of the situation is that if your video card supports sound-out through dvi then a cable such as the one i use should work for you. I'm not sure about dvi-to-dvi cables though.i believe that there must not have been the ability to get sound through dvi at one point in time. Perhaps this is where the word impossible came from. However, can vouche for getting sound through my own connection!

Better cpu or gpu

Dvi From Gpu Audio From Cpu To Usb

If you are unsure if your card supports it try asking the manufacturer.i think the only part determining if you can get sound or not is the video card. The end device shouldn't matter. Recently, I replaced my older Asus GT9600 card with the newer Asus GTX560.

Now, at first I didn't noticed any changes (well, apart from the performance boost).Then the other day I randomly booted up with my amplifier being off and my headphones disconnected - and the weirdest thing happened; sound was playing. At first I was all confused and couldn't figure out where it was comming from. My monitor (Samsung 2493HM) has build in speakers, I knew that much, but I've never connected the audio and though I was using HDMI input, I was using DVI output from the adapter - so it took me a second to realize what had happened. Once I did though, it was pretty obvious: They must have added support for DVI-HDMI on my new graphics adapters (nothing else had changed). Alright, cool.I then checked the 'Sound' settings in the control panel; here a device named 'Syncmaster-0' with a screen icon had appeared as a playback device.So I started diggin' around.From what I can tell, Nvidia 200-series and newer as well as cards from the ATI 3k-series and upward will output sound over DVI.

With the certain exceptions. As it seems to require additional hardware features, some of the 'cheap' versions may not support this. For example, it should be supported by most GTX200 models, but not the GT200 - though I guess it's more of a manufacturer difference, as I doubt the actual GPU model has anything to do with it.but I really don't know.I would however expect any of their newest cards to offer this feature.As for the monitor input.

If you're using HDMI input, any monitor should natively support this feature, as the monitor cant tell the diffence. Thanks for the insight all of you, however it wasn't what I was hoping for,I hoped that, boom dvi-dvi can now pipe audio as well, no need for that stupid HDMI cable,I guess somethings are too good to be TRUE. Buts its still wierd why would anyone with a modern gpu needA dvi-HDMI connection in the 1st place?

Example a gtx 560 they all come with HDMIAmite, Good choice on the 560 btw, but U could have summoned a bit more courage and got a 560ti,Now with the 560 ur only getting abt 90% of the cakeWhy do U have a div-HDMI coz im sure that 560 has a HDMI port.I think connecting HDMI on your gpu to HDMI on monitor.is better thanConnecting dvi-HDMI converter on the dvi of you then connecting HDMIfrom converter to HDMI on monitor. Amite, Good choice on the 560 btw, but U could have summoned a bit more courage and got a 560ti,Now with the 560 ur only getting abt 90% of the cakeWhy do U have a div-HDMI coz im sure that 560 has a HDMI port.I think connecting HDMI on your gpu to HDMI on monitor.is better thanConnecting dvi-HDMI converter on the dvi of your gpu then connecting HDMIfrom converter to HDMI on monitorI can't answer for Amita, but there are plenty of reasons for using a DVI port. Many video cards have one HDMI, one DVI, and perhaps one VGA port.

Many computer users, self included, have more than one HDMI monitor and/or projector. Some of us have an AV receiver (which may or may not pass-through the monitor's EDID).

Some of us are using nVidia 3D Vision which won't work if it can't read the EDID of a 3D certified monitor/PJ. Things can be complicated, but the simple answer is — if you have two HDMI monitors but your video card has only one HDMI port, one of the monitors gets connected to the DVI port via an adapter.

Dvi From Gpu Audio From Cpu