A few days ago, the monitor went dark, and did not respond to VGA signals from the laptop.
Surely someone has a fix - I'm dead in the water, and a clean install would be too painful (and unnecessary for professional grade software). I have an ASUS VS247 external monitor, usually connected to a DELL latitude E6440 laptop. I need a way to get into Safe Mode to correct the issue.
Tried booting from Windows 10 DVD created from ISO, but after a short while it hands back off to the hard drive installation and "out of range" again.
Since I can't see anything, I can't adjust the resolution/timing that the Upgrade changed to be out of range - the monitor and video card were working perfectly before the Upgrade. Thanks,I have the same problem but am upgrading from 7 Ultimate - process was finished, but upon reboot get the blue Windows icon and circling dots for a few seconds then black screen with "out of range" message. PS : I never faced this problem while installing any other version of windows I have a Monitor with a resolution of 1360 x 768 / 60Hz.įYI : I am also using a custom VGA cable instead of the one i got with the monitor But when i try to boot from the USB Flash Drive the windows 10 logo shows up with the rotating dots and then the monitor displays the following message : "Out of range / 85kHz / 60HZ". I already have windows 7 64 installed on my system. Plugable USB 3.I am trying to clean install windows 10.
These simply connects the USB 3.0 ports on the dock, then to your monitor via HDMI, DVI or VGA. Next, you’ll want two of our USB 3.0 graphics adapters (UGA-3000). During POST I saw 'OUT OF RANGE', while windows loaded I also saw OUT OF RANGE until Radion software was installed. I was using the HDMI output connector from video card to the HDMI input connector to the monitor. Plugable USB 3.0 UD-3900H Dual Monitor Horizontal Docking Station: I have this problem on an ASUS VZ27A, your normal run of the mill 2k x 1440 monitor with HDMI, DisplayPort and VGA inputs. Plugable USB 3.0 UD-3900 Dual Display Universal Docking Station: Please see their product pages for more information and feel free to choose the one you might prefer: The main difference between the two is their form factor (horizontal versus vertical) as well as the port placements.
Additionally, they provide gigabit Ethernet connectivity as well as a total of six USB ports (two USB 3.0 ports, four USB 2.0 ports).
I would recommend either versions of our USB 3.0 Dual Display Docking Stations (UD-3900 or UD-3900H).īoth of these docking stations can drive up to two 1080p displays via one HDMI port and one DVI port (or VGA with the included DVI-to-VGA adapter). We don’t offer any single quadruple display docking stations, but what we generally recommend to customers looking to achieve four displays is the use of one of our USB 3.0 docking stations in combination with two of our USB 3.0 graphics adapters. I’ll proceed assuming USB-C is out of the picture, but let me know if you might reconsider there. Compatible USB-C and Thunderbolt 3 ports come with huge benefits over the typical USB 3.0 Type-A port, which you might be interested in taking advantage of especially in a new system. You mention that you can’t guarantee a USB-C port will be on your next computer, however USB-C is growing more prevalent along with Thunderbolt 3, so there is a bit of a conflict there. The key question that I need to understand from you to best provide a potential Plugable solution is what kind of future systems you will be considering.