The Monitor Range is located in south-central Nevada in the United States. The range lies west and northwest of the Hot Creek Range and north of U.S. Route 6 in Nye County. It extends into the southwest corner of Eureka County at its northern end ending just south of U.S. Route 50. Tonopah is about 15 miles west of the south end of the range and Eureka lies about 20 miles (32 km) east of the north end of the range.[1] Its highest point is Table Mountain at 10,649 feet (3,246 m).
The Table Mountain Wilderness Area lies in the central part of the Monitor Range. The mountains cover an area of 1,176 square miles (3,046 km2), and lies between the Antelope Valley and the Monitor Valley at the northern end. At the southern end, the mountains lie between the Toquima Range and Stone Cabin Valley.
As the map/graphic shows, its extreme linearity is because the range is an extensive linear horst between graben (down-dropped) valleys to the east and west. The range lies amongst a series of range-valley-ranges, in south-central Nevada (mostly south of the Humboldt River). The pattern is the result of crustal extension as part of the basin and range topography of western North America.
The Forest Service is in charge of 83.6% of the mountains and the Bureau of Land Management manages 16% of the range. Pinon-juniper makes up 39.3% of the area, with Sagebrush scrub making up 24.8% of the mountains. Montane shrub accounts for 19.9%.
As I already explained in the comments, the monitor telling you "(input) out of range" means that your graphics adapter's output is out of the range your monitor can handle. Since that is apparently already the case in the grub environment, you should change grub's graphic configuration to a value that both your graphics adapter and monitor can handle.
The usual place to configure grub is /etc/default/grub, and you should always use that file if possible. However, you'll need to run update-grub to compile the new configuration, which can be tedious from the outside (e.g. a live system). So if you are only able to access the file system from the outside, it's easier to directly modify /boot/grub/grub.cfg. In your case, find the set gfxmode= line and set it to something like set gfxmode=640x480.
If that worked and you are able to boot and use the system, do the same change in /etc/default/grub (the setting is called GRUB_GFXMODE there and usually commented out). Otherwise, the next update-grub will overwrite your changes (for example when a new kernel has been installed).
Does anyone know how to monitor a range of IP traffic on the firewall? Note: i'm trying to view the historical traffic data on the firewall as it's not pertinent to set up a new rule and monitor all traffic to/from the range requested of me.
i'm currently running version 10.0.5 on a PA3020 and i've been requested to check for any traffic from a range of IP addresses (ex: 120.50.47.20 - 120.50.47.30). Some of the ranges requested to monitor are quite large so it's going to be painful to go through each IP address in each range so i'm looking for a faster way of check this historical data.
While my PC is booting up and during the BIOS phase, my monitor shows Out of Range until Microsoft Windows starts loading. Everything is working properly after that with the monitor. That error message appears to be some sort of monitor-specific generated error message too.
My problem is identical to yours and has the out of range error while the computer POSTs, but works fine once Windows display driver is loaded. The problem is not my LCD and I assume you have an LCD as well because you will find that you won't have this issue with a CRT.
What has happened is that video cards have a normal default resolution for BIOS, which is usually very low. The problem I was having is that the vertical and horizontal frequency outputted by my video card in bios was all cracked out. For some reason, it was set to a non-standard frequency. You can find if yours is doing that by using a CRT or another monitor that works and booting into BIOS. Looking around in your OSD (on-screen display) and somewhere it should tell you either the resolution or the 2 frequencies.
The issue is LCDs will only operate within certain resolutions and frequencies, whereas CRTs can be forced into almost any. So the problem is not your LCD (which is what I thought was my problem too) it is in fact some setting for your video card, be it in the BIOS or in the firmware of the card. This is why once the Windows display driver is loaded, everything works fine because now the card is outputting a standard resolution that is supported.
I was attempting to install Windows ME (don't ask why!). Anyway, after a BIOS jumper reset I got the infamous OUT OF RANGE issue. All I did to fix the issue was pull the power out of the monitor for a few seconds and plugged it back in, and as if by magic I got my screen back.
However, in general, if you are experiencing the Out of Range error when trying to access the BIOS or boot up your computer, it is likely that the monitor's refresh rate or resolution is set higher than what the display supports. To fix this issue, you will need to change the display settings in the BIOS.
I'm curious if anyone brings a Launch monitor with them to the Driving range. I have a local range where it's just mats inside hitting towards a net 100 feet away. Decent to work on mechanics, but no other feedback. I'm thinking of purchasing a monitor that can display data on my phone.
Anyone have opinions on a decent priced monitor that isn't too hard to set up at a public driving range? is the Rapsodo MLM the only small sub $300 option out there? Not looking to spend the $600 right now on the Garmin S10, but am open to ideas.
"In fact , we both tend to hold the Midwestern stoic view that genuine problems are solved with action, not pissing and moaning. If you run around sharing your feelings too much, you'll eventually arrive at a place where you're not only still screwed up, but now everyone knows about it, too." - John Gierach - Sex, Death and Fly Fishing
Have you checked out the main MGS page lately? They have done Best Launch Monitors for the past several years. It's an excellent resource to see the pros/cons of the more popular options and you can search pricing from there.
In your price range hckymeyer gave the best resource, but you might want to look at the SkyCaddie SC200 or SC300 are both very good basic LM for the money. They are radar based, so not sure how they will work in that limited flight environment. You might be better off with a cameras based unit, but then you're getting into a bit higher priced units.
All are very good for what they do. Just a matter of what you want and how you want to work. MLM requires your iPhone or iPad. The others don't. Swing Caddie and Rapsodo have apps and Rapsodo has a yearly subscription where the SC's don't.
I can say that I carry my Garmin R10 every time I go to the range. I orginally looked at buying a SC300i or a MLM, but caught the R10 on sale so I jumped on it (also they are onsale again for 499). From what I can remember, i was leaning towards the MLM becasue of price but liked the VC stuff better because it would allow me to use my phone for other stuff. I would say, you maybe buy a used R10 or MLM2 Pro for around the same price. I am a big fan of what they offer as far as more then numbers.
I purchased a used Rapsodo MLM and have used it on several driving ranges. The first was a classic driving range tied to a college golf team and it worked perfectly. Obviously, you had to take the numbers with a grain of salt given the range ball condition. I think it worked well at this location as the mats were covered (more on that later), there was enough space behind to position the monitor without someone walking by and hitting it and the balls were all clean. The MLM picked up every shot and traced the ball's trajectory.
When I returned home, our course has a small area to warm up. It's about 60-70 yard long netted area with about seven or eight mats. A few things that made it difficult to use the MLM here. First, it's not covered. In the South Florida sun, I found my iPhone often stopped working because it was in the sun and overheated. Second, the mats are fairly short making it difficult to position the MLM where someone won't kick it by mistake. Finally, my course does not have a ball washer for the range balls. As a result, the balls are all dirty and somewhat abused which makes it difficult for the MLM to pick up the ball flight. It does pick up ball data though.
So, here's what hapenning: this week, out of nowhere my monitor started showing me this message: "Out of range signal. Cannot display this video mode, change computer display input to 1600x1200 @ 60mhz".
Now the real picles in this situation: I've been using this monitor, in this very same settings since 2008 when I first bought it. There's no support for this model anymore as there are no more drivers available in the Dell website. Native Win7 64 driver was working pretty fine untill this week. The only workaround I found so far was unplugging the DVI cable and plugging it back until monitor works again. Restarting the monitor (power button hold for 5 seconds) also works. I've uninstalled the monitor driver and reinstalled it, no success.
Same problem. Except for me I'm using AMD FirePro 2460. Win7-32. At home I have THREE 2007fp's, driven from the 2460. At work I have another THREE 2007fp's, driven from another 2460. Both the home and the work setups have had this problem intermittently. Out of the three monitors, only one is afflicted; the other two are always fine. Since I'm using AMD/ATI, and you Nvidia.... that somewhat rules out the GPU. Please post if you find a solution.
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