You can make a difference in the Apple Support Community!

When you sign up with your Apple Account, you can provide valuable feedback to other community members by upvoting helpful replies and User Tips.

Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

DEL 2721HSX not working with MacBook Pro

I have a MacBook Pro 15" inch which I'm trying to connect with a Dell S2721HSX Monitor via a HP USB-C Dock G5. My HP laptop works fine but the monitor displays No HDMI Signal Detected when I attach the MacBook. I fear that the monitor's driver does not support the Apple device. Is there any fix?

MacBook Pro 15″, macOS 12.2

Posted on Mar 5, 2022 2:31 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Mar 5, 2022 4:47 PM

that display appears to be a fairly ordinary 1920 by 1080 with these inputs:


Input Connectors

1 x HDMI Port (ver 1.4)

1 x Display Port 1.2


The captive cable from the Dock is the one that must plug into your Mac.

On a Mac, this USB-C dock will support at most ONE display. Genuine ThunderBolt Docks can support two..


--------

Macs do not use added things the Windows world calls "drivers" (but are in fact merely display personalities.) There is no incompatibility here.


Instead, to get a Mac display to become active, you need the Mac to query the display, and the display to answer with its name and capabilities. Otherwise, the display will not be shown as present, and no data will be sent to the display. "No signal detected" is generated by the DISPLAY, not by the Mac.

 

This query is only sent at certain times:

• at startup

• at wake from sleep — so momentarily sleeping and waking your Mac may work

• at insertion of the Mac-end of the display-cable, provided everything on that cable is ready-to-go

• on invoking Option-(Detect Display) button in Displays preferences (from another display)

 

so try doing some of those things and see if the display comes alive.


Modern Displays with multiple ports are sometimes busy scanning the other ports, looking for an input, and miss the query from the Mac. They need to pay attention to the port you are actually using, or they will miss the query.


Some displays have On-Screen Display settings that can be used to tell the display a computer is attached on a certain port, or a certain port should be highest priority. Changing those may make your display more responsive.


Some displays include their own private "sleep" settings for the display alone. This can allow the display to enter its own sleep mode, on top of the Mac's not sending it data. A display that is sleeping on its own cannot respond to the Mac's query, and will stay dark.



2 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Mar 5, 2022 4:47 PM in response to HarrogateMac

that display appears to be a fairly ordinary 1920 by 1080 with these inputs:


Input Connectors

1 x HDMI Port (ver 1.4)

1 x Display Port 1.2


The captive cable from the Dock is the one that must plug into your Mac.

On a Mac, this USB-C dock will support at most ONE display. Genuine ThunderBolt Docks can support two..


--------

Macs do not use added things the Windows world calls "drivers" (but are in fact merely display personalities.) There is no incompatibility here.


Instead, to get a Mac display to become active, you need the Mac to query the display, and the display to answer with its name and capabilities. Otherwise, the display will not be shown as present, and no data will be sent to the display. "No signal detected" is generated by the DISPLAY, not by the Mac.

 

This query is only sent at certain times:

• at startup

• at wake from sleep — so momentarily sleeping and waking your Mac may work

• at insertion of the Mac-end of the display-cable, provided everything on that cable is ready-to-go

• on invoking Option-(Detect Display) button in Displays preferences (from another display)

 

so try doing some of those things and see if the display comes alive.


Modern Displays with multiple ports are sometimes busy scanning the other ports, looking for an input, and miss the query from the Mac. They need to pay attention to the port you are actually using, or they will miss the query.


Some displays have On-Screen Display settings that can be used to tell the display a computer is attached on a certain port, or a certain port should be highest priority. Changing those may make your display more responsive.


Some displays include their own private "sleep" settings for the display alone. This can allow the display to enter its own sleep mode, on top of the Mac's not sending it data. A display that is sleeping on its own cannot respond to the Mac's query, and will stay dark.



DEL 2721HSX not working with MacBook Pro

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.