Thanks
Now that we are talking about changes,
In order for it to actually work correct during a full recovery of windows, there must be one more change:
0x0A should be 49 (This is not a LEN4046 LCD, it should be LEN4049).
But even then, there are still issues - each time the machine boots windows, it is detected as a LEN4040, no matter what i do. Even if i change the EDID now stored in the registry back, it is just overwritten with one belonging to a standard 15" XGA thinkpads LCD. It has done this since i re-installed windows
And while we're at it, some minor updates to make it look nice:
it still says "HV150UX1-100" from "0x71 to 0x7C. Might as well change it to IAQX10, i.e. "49 41 51 58 31 30 0A 0A 0A 0A 0A 0A"
If someone wants to keep the information in the original EDID with regards to manufacturer date/year, copy the contents of 0x10 and 0x11
(And then you need a new checksum - so might as well be easier with Phoenix edid editor)
I left it unmodified at 40 Hz, since the IAQX10 talks about two rates: 42.266 Hz and 50 Hz, but no mention of why this is the case. I thought that the 50 Hz might have been a mistake, but i notice now that for example the V-active level corresponds to one of approx. 50 Hz.
I changged it to the factory settings using powerstrip, but with the resilt that it seems to flicker more now that it did before.
One question also which left me wondering: 0x1B to 0x20 tells about the colour gamut CIE primaries. Right now, these are 91 and 54 for Red (X,Y). Since this was taken from a HV150UX1-100, it should correspond to 0.569 and 0.332 respectively. I'm thinking wether it is possible to change the gamut of the LCD this way - but i am not sure how to know the CIE to hex value mapping and i'm not sure if gamut is a limitation of optical properties or not - anyone willing to try this out ($29 for Powerstrip is kinda expensive it it doesn't make any difference)
