Hi.
I have a new HP Omen 32, which is pretty awesome. I saw on Hardforum that someone with an earlier firmware version of this monitor than mine was able to overclock the monitor just fine. But, any overclock of mine above the advertised max of 75hz, gives me this "out of range message":
![[Image: kAD2DEG.jpg]]()
It looks to me like this is an artificial limit, imposed by the firmware. And it wouldn't be a problem, except for the message, and the monitor going into sleep-mode after 30 seconds.
Is there a way to bypass the monitor's prevention of overclocking?
Would this guide for hacking a monitor's FreeSync range be of any use in changing its recognized in-range hz spectrum?:
http://www.guru3d.com/news-story/owners-...-hack.html
Also, would there be a way to extract an earlier firmware version from one monitor, one without the overclock prevention, and apply it to another monitor?
I have a new HP Omen 32, which is pretty awesome. I saw on Hardforum that someone with an earlier firmware version of this monitor than mine was able to overclock the monitor just fine. But, any overclock of mine above the advertised max of 75hz, gives me this "out of range message":
![[Image: kAD2DEG.jpg]](http://i.imgur.com/kAD2DEG.jpg)
It looks to me like this is an artificial limit, imposed by the firmware. And it wouldn't be a problem, except for the message, and the monitor going into sleep-mode after 30 seconds.
Is there a way to bypass the monitor's prevention of overclocking?
Would this guide for hacking a monitor's FreeSync range be of any use in changing its recognized in-range hz spectrum?:
http://www.guru3d.com/news-story/owners-...-hack.html
Also, would there be a way to extract an earlier firmware version from one monitor, one without the overclock prevention, and apply it to another monitor?