Difference between revisions of "Ryde FAQ"

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(Created page with " Although I have a picture on my HDMI Monitor, I am not getting any sound. Some HDMI monitors can be detected by the Raspberry Pi as DVI monitors. Add the line "hdmi_drive=2"...")
 
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  Although I have a picture on my HDMI Monitor, I am not getting any sound.
 
  Although I have a picture on my HDMI Monitor, I am not getting any sound.
Some HDMI monitors can be detected by the Raspberry Pi as DVI monitors.  Add the line "hdmi_drive=2" to /boot/config.txt to force HDMI.
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Some HDMI monitors can be detected by the Raspberry Pi as DVI monitors.  Add the line "hdmi_drive=2" to /boot/config.txt to force HDMI and reboot.
  
 
  Everything seems to be working, except I only get "Locked No Video" on the screen, never a picture.
 
  Everything seems to be working, except I only get "Locked No Video" on the screen, never a picture.
 
Make sure that you have the HDMI monitor plugged into the primary HDMI socket - that's the one nearest the USB-C power socket.
 
Make sure that you have the HDMI monitor plugged into the primary HDMI socket - that's the one nearest the USB-C power socket.
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I need to use a Composite Video input monitor, not an HDMI monitor.
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Select the display option that you want in the ssh Console Menu.
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When I use a Composite Video Monitor, I lose some of the edges of the display.
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Add the line "overscan_scale=1" to /boot/config.txt and reboot.
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I can't save changes to /boot/config.txt
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The file /boot/config.txt is owned by root, so you will need to use the command "sudo nano /boot/config.txt" to edit it.

Revision as of 20:27, 29 August 2020

Although I have a picture on my HDMI Monitor, I am not getting any sound.

Some HDMI monitors can be detected by the Raspberry Pi as DVI monitors. Add the line "hdmi_drive=2" to /boot/config.txt to force HDMI and reboot.

Everything seems to be working, except I only get "Locked No Video" on the screen, never a picture.

Make sure that you have the HDMI monitor plugged into the primary HDMI socket - that's the one nearest the USB-C power socket.

I need to use a Composite Video input monitor, not an HDMI monitor.

Select the display option that you want in the ssh Console Menu.

When I use a Composite Video Monitor, I lose some of the edges of the display.

Add the line "overscan_scale=1" to /boot/config.txt and reboot.

I can't save changes to /boot/config.txt

The file /boot/config.txt is owned by root, so you will need to use the command "sudo nano /boot/config.txt" to edit it.