Mac Studio always fails to wake up 2nd external monitor

I have 2 external monitors connected to my Mac Studio. Every time Mac wakes up, it brings only one of my monitor on but not both of them.


From system preferences > Displays, both displays are detected correctly (but one of them actually has no signal from Mac Studio).

  • If I toggle refresh rate of the 2nd external monitor, it might become available (not always)
  • If I unplug and re-plugin the 2nd external monitor it will become available.


This does not happen on my Mac Pro with exact same cables & monitors connected to it.

Posted on Jul 19, 2023 12:26 PM

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Posted on Jul 19, 2023 1:35 PM

The Mac uses a system that reminds me of “Plug and play” to determine what display is connected, and what its capabilities are.


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

• hold the Option key while you click on the (Detect Display) button that will appear in Displays preferences (from another display)

 

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.


MacOS 13.4.1 is said to have additional tweaks to recognize and retain displays better.


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6 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jul 19, 2023 1:35 PM in response to spc0114

The Mac uses a system that reminds me of “Plug and play” to determine what display is connected, and what its capabilities are.


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

• hold the Option key while you click on the (Detect Display) button that will appear in Displays preferences (from another display)

 

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.


MacOS 13.4.1 is said to have additional tweaks to recognize and retain displays better.


Aug 8, 2023 9:37 AM in response to spc0114

Found a work around for my case --


  1. Turn off "Allow Apple Watch to unlock your Mac"
  2. Press a random key to wake my Mac, but do not enter password yet.
    1. There is only 1 monitor awaken at this step
  3. Press "esc" key to cancel the login screen
    1. Both monitors will resume blank screen
  4. Press a random key to wake my Mac
    1. Both monitors are awake at this time.

Jul 19, 2023 1:44 PM in response to Grant Bennet-Alder

Thanks for the quick response :)


I am currently on MacOS 13.4.1 and think maybe it is not easy conclude to blame monitor manufactures


setup 1

1st monitor use USB-C -- does not resume from standby

2nd monitor use HDMI -- can resume from standby


setup 2

1st monitor use USB-C -- can resume from standby

2nd monitor use USB-C to DisplayPort -- does not resume from standby

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Mac Studio always fails to wake up 2nd external monitor

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