Acer X233h Driver Windows 7
The Acer X233H bd is a solid 23” widescreen display that strikes just the right balance between best value performance and the latest features for home media applications. Thanks to the 16:9 format, the Acer X233H bd 23' Widescreen LCD Monitor can view photos and movies over a broader cinematic area for a thrilling experience. Download Acer LCD Monitor X223W for Windows to monitor driver. Join or Sign In. Sign in to add and modify your software. When the monitor restarts - Acer appears - then it proceeds directly to my desk top - all will be good till my screen saver comes on. Then I have to power off the monitor again. I see at the Acer driver site only a Vista OS is listed for this monitor. Is there another monitor driver that supports Win7 that I might have better luck with?
After battling with my new Nvidia Surround setup for 10 hours today in an attempt to get it to work, I thought I would post my working process so that others may have less trouble. I've got one Acer X233H screen and two Acer G235H screens. They have identical specifications except for one crucial difference: sync polarity. The X233H is +/- while the other two are +/+. That one difference has cause me more headaches than any of my experiences with Eyefinity, but I believe I've finally found my working process.The Problem:
Acer 5745g Drivers
You're attempting to get Nvidia Surround working on your shiny new setup. You bought your monitors at different times, however, and you could never determine the sync polarity since most manufacturers don't list it. Now when you go to set up Surround, it either doesn't work at all or it defaults to first resolution that has the same polarity, which is usually ridiculously small and the wrong aspect ratio.
The Solution:
The idea is to trick Nvidia into thinking you have the same monitors, by forcing one of their drivers on the other two. I do not recommend trying this unless you're sure the monitors are extremely similar, such as my Acer's from above. If you mess up your monitor by putting a different manufacturer's driver on it, you do so at your own risk. With that said, here's the steps:
- Download MonInfo. Open up this tool, and find the monitor you want to use in the top left dialog area. Select it and then choose File > Create INF to export a driver from the monitor. Save the file in a folder that has no other INF files, preferrably a new directory.
- Install the latest Nvidia drivers (I used 301.42 WHQL) as a clean installation. Basically, we need to clear any Custom Resolutions and settings you may have created if you've been trying to fix this prior to starting these steps.
- Reboot.
- Go to the Device Manager and find your monitors. Regardless of how they're listed, Right Click and uninstall each of them one by one. After they've all been removed, Scan for Hardware Changes so that Windows will put Generic PnP monitors in their place. What you want to do here is the important part. For each monitor, Right Click and choose Update Driver. Go through whatever steps you need to in order to get to the Have Disk menu, and select that you have a disk. When the Browse window opens up, navigate to the INF file you created earlier. Windows will complain about the driver not being signed (of course it isn't, you made it!), so make sure to click allow/accept on any prompts that show up. Repeat this process for each of your monitors until the Device Manager shows them all as the same monitor, which was 'G235H EDID Override' in my case.
- Reboot.
- Open up your Nvidia Control Panel and go directly to the Surround setup, and choose configure. If all went well, Surround should now be working and correctly configurable.
- If Surround didn't work after this then try repeating the process, except use a different monitor as the driver to base your other monitors off of. I attempted to use the X233H driver for my other two monitors first to no avail, while using the G235H driver instead worked perfectly. Sometimes it just takes tinkering.
Well, that's about it. These were the steps I followed to get around Nvidia's ridiculous requirement for identical sync polarity, which can be different even if you have the same exact model monitors that have manufacture dates that are only months apart. I hope this helps others out there struggling with this issue, and good luck!