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I've done quite a bit of reading around on this kind of issue and still haven't been able to solve it. Here's the information:
(TV) Sceptre E328BV-FMDC 32-Inch 1080p 60Hz LED HDTV
(Graphics Card) 2 x GIGABYTE GV-N660OC-2GD GeForce GTX 660 2GB 192-bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 x16 HDCP Ready SLI Support Video Card [running SLI]
(OS) Windows 7
The TV has two interfaces: HDMI and VGA (manual says VGA supports 1080p). The graphics cards have three interfaces: HDMI, DVI-I, and DVI-D.
I originally established an HDMI connection. Everything looked great except for text. The most common example of this was black text appearing to be blue or red in places, and blue-underlined links being black in places. These were the most noticeable examples, but all text seemed to be affected.
I've tried turning off NVidia's overscaling and my TV won't allow the selection of dot-by-dot (1:1 or pixel by pixel on other TV's) when using the HDMI port.
I then purchased a VGA to DVI-I cable and the text looked fine, but everything else definitely wasn't up to 1080p quality. Plus, there were slight, but present, static-y lines running horizontally across the screen (they're most noticeable in games running on 1080p, even with V-Sync enabled). I read somewhere that this happens when you convert VGA to DVI at 1080p.
Two interesting things about the HDMI method: turning off ClearType in Windows 7 fixes the issue, but text is really terrible to look at after that, and switching to a custom resolution of 1080i in the NVidia control panel also seems to fix it, but then everything else is of really poor quality.
Can anyone explain what the source of the issue here is, or how I would go about fixing it? I would really like to use an HDMI connection on this one.
Thanks!
EDIT: Starting to think ClearType is the issue here. Found this page: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa970267(v=vs.110).aspx
The Gamma settings in particular look like they might help. Can't mess with them right now, but will when I get home later tonight. Also, if I open a notepad document, fill it with w's (which seem to have a major issue with the coloring) what happens is they're all red, then if I drag the window very slightly, they turn blue, then red again and so on. Strange.
EDIT2: I couldn't edit the ClearType Registry settings (for some reason they had no effect) so I downloaded GDIPP, had too much trouble, and finally downloaded MacType. From here, I built a custom profile from the Windows 7 optimized one and found the issue. There is a setting called "Optimize for LCD", a couple of them actually. I changed it to Light Anti-aliasing. Now, it ain't super pretty, but the red/blue shadows are gone and the text looks just fine. I'm going to call this one solved for now and say that Microsoft really should put some more effort into their text rendering :P
When you're in the 1080p mode (instead of 1080i), does the resolution in your nVidia change? Like, instead of say 1920 x 1080 does it drop down? – KickAss – 2013-12-21T22:07:04.000
Nope. NVidia shows 1080p, 1920 x 1080 (native), and Windows shows 1920 x 1080 (recommended). – None – 2013-12-22T00:11:44.407
Okay, thats good. NVidia has anti aliasing setting i think, try toggling that – KickAss – 2013-12-22T00:34:16.500
Didn't change anything. Starting to thing ClearType is the culprit here. – None – 2013-12-22T00:52:34.020
Can you post a screenshot and a photo of the screen? – user1306322 – 2013-12-22T01:03:37.727
A DVI-I connector includes VGA signals - there is no conversion. Most often a small adapter is attached to the DVI-I port on the graphics card and a VGA cable is run to the VGA port on the monitor or TV. – Brian – 2013-12-22T02:01:46.023