This will disable the max tick rate limit of 60.0 when running on battery. The simplest way of doing this is running the console command: r.DontLimitOnBattery 1 In order to override this behavior, you can set console variable r.DontLimitOnBattery to a non-zero value. A desktop machine running on a UPS should realize there is no internal battery and report to UE4 that this power source is not a system battery, but not all UPS manufacturers are compliant in this regard it seems.Ī machine may throttle itself in a variety of ways when it determines that it is not plugged into power, but UE4's Editor itself also does a hard-coded throttle to 60FPS on it's own. The most common reason a machine may falsely identify as being ran on a battery appears to be the case of a desktop using an Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) that is being wrongly reported as an internal battery. Unless you are in fringe territory, this generally only applies to laptops, but technically it is based off of a OS platform specific call that could be wrong for a variety of reasons. There does not appear to be any non-editor tick rate limit based on whether you are running on battery or not for standalone game run-times. This is the computer in my office and the one I want to stream from.As of Unreal Engine 4.24.1, the time this post was written, UE4's Editor will force itself to run at 60 FPS to prevent battery drain on any device that thinks it is currently running on some sort of battery. This is why I'm only using it as an intermediary device. The laptop connected to the TV has an 850m in it, which is not strong enough to run 4k games at 60fps. Anyone know if this will be an issue or if there's a work around? As far as I understand, if I get my PC streaming in 4k but leave my laptop in 1080p, it will downsample the 4k to 1080p on my TV, correct? I haven't been able to test this yet because I need issue 1 resolved first, but it's a big concern of mine. I'm using HDMI 2.0 so I'm not sure why this is happening. When I set my laptop to 4k, the highest refresh rate that it would allow was 30hz. Is there a way I can force my PC to stream 4k content without having a 4k displaying physically connected? And I can't extend the display or anything because there's technically just the one display connected. However on my gaming PC Windows 10 will only let me increase my resolution to 2k, because that's what the connected monitor supports. I was able to get my laptop to display 4k by displaying only on the TV, and setting the resolution to 4k. This worked flawlessly, and also supports 4k streams. I was using Nvidia Moonlight to stream from my PC to a laptop that was next to the TV and connected through HDMI. I've been doing this for about a year with my old 1080p TV. I would like to stream my desktop to my TV and play 4k 60fps games. I own a new gaming PC that's in my office (on a different floor and far from TV) which is hooked up to a 2k monitor. I bought a brand new LG C8 OLED 4K TV and put it in my livingroom. Ok so I have a bit of a strange setup that I'm trying to get working.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |