Can a DELL Latitude E6420 run 3 external monitors?

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I am trying t find out if there is a way my DELL E6420 can run 3 external monitors?

I currently run 2 with the laptop screen as the third using a Dell docking station. The docking station still has one VGA port available.

rick schott

Posted 2012-01-31T18:26:17.437

Reputation: 181

Have you tried using the single vga port that is free? – Ramhound – 2012-01-31T18:48:12.303

Rick, did you ever find an answer? I, too, would like to know if it's possible to run 3 external 24", 1920x1200 monitors through the dock with the Nvidia graphics. – Charles Chen – 2012-05-03T20:15:33.943

See my answer, I forgot that I had asked this question. – rick schott – 2012-07-13T21:27:08.910

Answers

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I was able to run 3 24" monitors plus the laptop screen if need be on Windows 7 with a dock:

  • 1 HDMI Cable
  • 1 DVI Cable
  • 1 VGA Cable
  • Open the laptop screen

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rick schott

Posted 2012-01-31T18:26:17.437

Reputation: 181

@DanNeely If you have the Nvidia GPU, you can run three monitors... but I can only run two since I have the cheaper onboard Intel GPU. – Sun – 2014-11-05T17:40:06.970

It should be noted that you will need to enable Nvidia Optimus in the BIOS – вʀaᴎᴅᴏƞ вєнᴎєƞ – 2015-11-06T21:12:14.347

How did you get it to work, did you have to buy a USB dongle? Or where you able to do it with the dock and the hdmi port on the laptop? – None – 2012-08-09T16:21:14.587

@Dccloth My dock has 3 video out ports (1 each: display port, DVI, and VGA); I can use all 3 of them and the laptop screen at the same time (2 on the Quadro, 2 on the IGP). If you have a model with only the IGP I suspect you're limited to 2 screens. – Dan is Fiddling by Firelight – 2012-11-05T15:19:26.857

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You will need to get a USB -> VGA adapter in order to run three monitors or a more expensive solution. These USB -> VGA Adapters usually run $50. However, they suck for anything other than business use. Even then, it feels like you're "RDPing or VNCing" into that extra monitor. It is rather laggy.

kobaltz

Posted 2012-01-31T18:26:17.437

Reputation: 14 361

+1 for the recommended solution. But, I wouldn't describe the USB->VGA experience as sucky as network remote control. It is somewhat better than that. But you're right that falls short in certain circumstances, e.g. full screen video. Other than the obvious frequent refresh scenarios, I don't find it too laggy, especially if I keep the color quality at Medium (16-bit). My Microsoft Outlook lives on that second monitor, along with a few well-behaved apps. See also my answer at http://superuser.com/a/14119/781

– Chris W. Rea – 2012-01-31T19:00:22.600

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This is similar to situations where your laptop has a VGA, DVI and/or HDMI. You can have only two monitors running at the same time. This includes the laptop screen. You could run two external monitors or laptop + vga. Other than that, get a USB to VGA adapter. They are for the desperate though. Don't get if you're expecting to watch videos or play games.

kobaltz

Posted 2012-01-31T18:26:17.437

Reputation: 14 361

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I currently have a E6420 and was hoping to have two monitors and laptop display but it was a no go. I use the SIIG USB to VGA adapter. I work with spreadsheets and web pages so I am not looking for speed so it works for what I need.

I am running WIN 7 (64) and it works well. If you want to view videos and/or play games you can use the other monitor. Performance is a bit slow when dragging across screen but it is negligible.

Joe Paredes

Posted 2012-01-31T18:26:17.437

Reputation: 11

Are you using a dock or just the ports on the base machine? – Charles Chen – 2012-05-03T20:16:05.283