Greetings!
So my fiance bought me two of these:
https://www.amazon.com/LG-27GN950-B-Ultragear-Response-Compatibility/dp/B08BCRYS6B/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=LG27gn950-b&qid=1616266588&sr=8-1However I'm using a laptop and not sure what I need to view them in 4K? The laptop it self does not have a DisplayPort so I'm having to use the HDMI cord to make use of it. I was told that I needed to buy a splitter but not sure which one I need to buy for me to use the monitor or monitor's at maximum capacity. My goal is to build me another desktop but for now the laptop has to do the trick.
Thanks!
Comments
Any sort of multiplexer would only make the situation worse. If a monitor port doesn't have enough bandwidth for one monitor, then dividing that bandwidth between two monitors would only make the situation worse, if it even works at all.
It's probably possible to get the monitor to run at greatly reduced specs. It can probably handle 1920x1080 at 60 Hz, and may even be able to do 1920x1080 at 144 Hz or 2560x1440 at 60 Hz. But laptops don't necessarily want to offer high end connectivity, as that will drain power, which is at a premium.
If your laptop has a Thunderbolt port, you may want to look at whether you can get a DisplayPort adapter for that, and if so, what specs it will offer. It's not clear what that would be able to do, however, and your laptop likely doesn't have any such port at all.
You don't just need compatible ports. You need ample bandwidth.
You might want to contact HP and see what they say. They presumably know exactly what is in your laptop, and might offer an external adapter designed to work with your particular laptop.
You can try the USB-C cable as well since the laptop and monitor support it. That's limited to 8-bit 4k 60hz.
You can also try an HDMI in one monitor and a USB-C in the other monitor. But I don't think it will work. So I would expect to only use one of these until you get a desktop.
Windows will take care off how the monitor and laptop screen are used under Display Settings.
If you're not sure what the settings are, then right click on the desktop, click "Display settings", and then click "Advanced display settings" (which may require scrolling down to see). That should show your resolution and refresh rate for whatever monitors are available.
The GPU could do more through Displayport, but if that particular model does not come with a displayport then that doesn't really help.
1: USB-C supports displayport only if your laptop is wired to carry the signal from GPU to the USB-C port. To find out whether yours is, you need to either read technical specs of the laptop or ask the manufacturer
2: If you have multiple ports that you could connect that USB thingy to on your laptop, it might only work on one. Check by connecting it to each of them
3: Check that your monitor's input port is set to Displayport, so that the monitor looks for signal from that port (and not for example a signal through the HDMI port)
4: You could be exceeding the supported refresh rate or resolution for something. When trying to get the signal to work, it's good idea to drop to 1920 x 1080 resolution and 60 Hz refresh rate at first since at least that is supported by everything. Then try whether the better ones work only once you've got that working
Displayport 2.0 may be what you are thinking, as that's the latest and greated DisplayPort revision: DP 1.4 could already do 4k 120Hz, but 2.0 can support up to 16k and a whole host of other tricks.