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I own a laptop which only has VGA as a port for external displays. I'm thinking to buy an external flat-screen monitor for my laptop. Which resolution should the display have at the utmost so that I still have a reasonably sharp image?

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    A lot would depend on the video card. What video card is in the laptop? What is the laptop make/model?
    – Kruug
    Commented Jan 2, 2013 at 17:45
  • It's a Lenovo T400. It has Intel GMA 4500 MHD graphics.
    – Bob
    Commented Jan 2, 2013 at 17:51
  • Back when VGA was the connector many office PCs used Matrox video cards, because they simply had much better quality signal than the competition. Luckily, with HDMI/DVI/DisplayPort those problems usually belong to the past. Commented Jan 2, 2013 at 21:21

5 Answers 5

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I am not sure there is a limit in the standard.

However:

  • Your graphical card needs to be able to provide the image. 400MHz DACs are common, which would commonly limit it to any configuration using a lower than 400MHz bandwidth. E.g. 2048x1536@85 Hz (388 MHz). If your DAC is more capable then you can go higher, e.g. to 7680x4800.
  • You monitor needs to be able to recognize the signal.
  • With a poor quality cable and high bandwidth signals ghosting is likely. Which can be solved by simply buying a good enough cable.

In your case the GMA 4500 limits you to 2560x1600.

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VGA is an analog signaling method, and as such is greatly affected by:

  • Cable quality, which includes the gauge (thickness of the wire), shielding, and EM/RF filtering such as ferrite cores
  • Output signal from the video card
  • Signal processing on the display
  • External interference - proximity to power lines, microwaves, blenders, etc.

Most laptops are not well-shielded and don't have clean output to begin with, but in most cases I've seen, standard shielded VGA cables with ferrite cores on both ends yield good results only up to 1280x1024 or 1680x1050 or so over 6 foot / 2 meter lengths. Generally once you start trying 1080p (1920x1080) and higher, you may start to notice ghosting and quality loss.

For a clear image at high resolutions, your best option is to pick a heavy-gauge, well-shielded VGA cable with ferrite cores on both ends.

The best connection I was ever able to achieve with VGA was by using a monitor with BNC connectors (http://www.extron.com/product/product.aspx?id=syvgamalefibncmaleca&subtype=58&s=4), where I was able to get a decent signal at 2048x1536 60 Hz. I'm not sure if you'll find any LCD displays with BNC at any decent price points though - but perhaps worth mentioning anyway :-/

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  • +1 for Cable quality, use original cable
    – TripleS
    Commented Jan 10, 2016 at 10:22
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I know there's no standards on VGA connectors/port for max resolution. You should check your laptop's specs to see what the max it will output as a starter. Wikipedia says with sufficient quality cable, up to 2048x1536@85 Hz is possible. A laptop with just a VGA card, most likely the max resolution it will support externally will work fine.

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  • See @kruug 's answer for the maximum from the chipset spec sheet. Commented Jan 2, 2013 at 18:03
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3rd response to this thread: http://software.intel.com/en-us/forums/topic/295341

The specific video card that is in your system can handle up to 2048x1536 @ 75 Hz refresh

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Let's see. If using 11.6" try using 720p, if using 13.3" try using 768p, if using 14" try using 900p, if using 15.4" try using 1080p, but if it's an unstable laptop, you may start experience ghost images at the middle of gaming, but not severe at this level. For big laptops, if using 17.3", try using 1152p, and if using 18.6", try using 1440p. If eyesight is good, raise it by 1 resolution and for 18.6" use 1600p. If eyesight is bad, lower it by 1 resolution and for 11.6" use 640p.

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