I just made my 1920x1080 60hz monitor run at 1920x1440 which I never thought of doing before. Does this damage the panel or can I use this as a boost to 4:3 usage?
>>55975018
That just makes the picture look worse because it's compressing it vertically
>>55975042
If you mean it's being downsampled looking like a bilinear filtering, I'm fine with that because I'm just trying to record a 1440p 4:3 video. But I'm worried it's damaging the panel if I keep using it. Then again, my default mode is pushing 75hz when it's not supposed to and it has been fine. Just want to know if pushing vertical resolution capabilities will damage the panel.
>>55975018
Your monitor will be fine, I can run 1920x1080 on my 1360x768 TV. It looks terrible, but it can't damage the TV in any way
>>55975018
I don't know why you think this is a good idea, but the image gets resized to 1920x1080 before it even reaches the panel. So the panel has nothing to do with this.
>>55975966
I just confirmed that this is not true. I went into 1440p mode, recorded a 1440p video, watched the video back on 1080p and it's goes way bigger than monitor at 100%. Nothing is being resized. Got a nice crisp video recording.