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Power dissipation of hannspree HG19WNY "New York" LCD monitor?
Thinking of purchasing the Hannspree HG19WNY New York monitor for a
self build computer system: http://www.hannspree.com/global/News...x?mid=109&n=36 Looks great value for money @ £100 approx $200 with 700:1 contrast ratio, 5ms response time, DVI/RGB inputs, brightness 300 cd/m2, but can't find its operational power dissipation. Anyone know where I can get the info? Thanks |
#2
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Power dissipation of hannspree HG19WNY "New York" LCD monitor?
From the site you reference:
Power Consumption ON Mode ? 36W OFF Mode ? 1W Jack R "blackhead" wrote in message ... Thinking of purchasing the Hannspree HG19WNY New York monitor for a self build computer system: http://www.hannspree.com/global/News...x?mid=109&n=36 Looks great value for money @ £100 approx $200 with 700:1 contrast ratio, 5ms response time, DVI/RGB inputs, brightness 300 cd/m2, but can't find its operational power dissipation. Anyone know where I can get the info? Thanks |
#3
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Power dissipation of hannspree HG19WNY "New York" LCD monitor?
In article 952251b2-2b46-4bbd-91a4-8a1c845198d9
@z17g2000hsg.googlegroups.com, blackhead says... Thinking of purchasing the Hannspree HG19WNY New York monitor for a self build computer system: http://www.hannspree.com/global/News...x?mid=109&n=36 Looks great value for money @ £100 approx $200 with 700:1 contrast ratio, 5ms response time, DVI/RGB inputs, brightness 300 cd/m2, but can't find its operational power dissipation. Anyone know where I can get the info? 700:1 contrast ratio is quite franly, **** poor. I'd not touch anything under 1500:1. At 700:1, it's going to have a washed out look. Paying another £20 gets you this LG monitor which has 3000:1 contrast ratio and a response time of 2ms http://tinyurl.com/2vlyzz -- Conor As a Brit I'd like to thank the Americans for their help in the war against terror because if they'd not funded the IRA for 30 years, we wouldn't know how to deal with terrorists. |
#4
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Power dissipation of hannspree HG19WNY "New York" LCD monitor?
On 20 Feb, 19:25, Conor wrote:
In article 952251b2-2b46-4bbd-91a4-8a1c845198d9 @z17g2000hsg.googlegroups.com, blackhead says... Thinking of purchasing the Hannspree HG19WNY New York monitor for a self build computer system: http://www.hannspree.com/global/News...x?mid=109&n=36 Looks great value for money @ £100 approx $200 with 700:1 contrast ratio, 5ms response time, DVI/RGB inputs, brightness 300 cd/m2, but can't find its operational power dissipation. Anyone know where I can get the info? 700:1 contrast ratio is quite franly, **** poor. I'd not touch anything under 1500:1. At 700:1, it's going to have a washed out look. Paying another £20 gets you this LG monitor which has 3000:1 contrast ratio and a response time of 2ms http://tinyurl.com/2vlyzz -- Conor Thanks for the link. It's another £35, incl VAT but the monitor you suggested has been getting rave reviews in the popular computer magazines As a Brit I'd like to thank the Americans for their help in the war against terror because if they'd not funded the IRA for 30 years, we wouldn't know how to deal with terrorists. |
#5
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Power dissipation of hannspree HG19WNY "New York" LCD monitor?
Conor wrote:
In article 952251b2-2b46-4bbd-91a4-8a1c845198d9 @z17g2000hsg.googlegroups.com, blackhead says... Thinking of purchasing the Hannspree HG19WNY New York monitor for a self build computer system: http://www.hannspree.com/global/News...x?mid=109&n=36 Looks great value for money @ £100 approx $200 with 700:1 contrast ratio, 5ms response time, DVI/RGB inputs, brightness 300 cd/m2, but can't find its operational power dissipation. Anyone know where I can get the info? 700:1 contrast ratio is quite franly, **** poor. I'd not touch anything under 1500:1. At 700:1, it's going to have a washed out look. Paying another £20 gets you this LG monitor which has 3000:1 contrast ratio and a response time of 2ms http://tinyurl.com/2vlyzz Actually, depending on what you do, you may prefer the 700:1 monitor. To get numbers like 1500:1, they cheat. They change the backlight level dynamically, according to the content sent to the screen. That destroys Photoshop calibration, for people who rely on their screen looking and behaving exactly the same way, for each picture edited. So in fact, someone doing Photoshop should stay away from the 1500:1 unit, as it is likely playing with the backlight. Some monitor specifications include the "cheating" number and the "honest" panel-related number for you. For example here, this monitor lists 8000:1 "dynamic contrast", suitable for movie content, and 1000:1 for the actual contrast of the panel itself. As long as the OSD has a feature so the user can disable dynamic contrast, then the monitor can be used for things other than movies. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16824001254 As another example, they review and discuss some expensive monitors here, and the basic contrast on one of them is still 500:1, the other 1000:1. But the monitors have some other qualities, that make them worthwhile, such as 178 degree viewing angle (so color doesn't vary from edge to edge while viewed). They might not make good gaming monitors, but would be better for Photoshop. http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/oth...onitors_2.html Paul |
#6
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Do LCD response times less than 12ms matter?
On 21 Feb, 01:13, Paul wrote:
Conor wrote: In article 952251b2-2b46-4bbd-91a4-8a1c845198d9 @z17g2000hsg.googlegroups.com, blackhead says... Thinking of purchasing the Hannspree HG19WNY New York monitor for a self build computer system: http://www.hannspree.com/global/News...x?mid=109&n=36 Looks great value for money @ £100 approx $200 with 700:1 contrast ratio, 5ms response time, DVI/RGB inputs, brightness 300 cd/m2, but can't find its operational power dissipation. Anyone know where I can get the info? 700:1 contrast ratio is quite franly, **** poor. I'd not touch anything under 1500:1. At 700:1, it's going to have a washed out look. Paying another £20 gets you this LG monitor which has 3000:1 contrast ratio and a response time of 2ms http://tinyurl.com/2vlyzz Actually, depending on what you do, you may prefer the 700:1 monitor. To get numbers like 1500:1, they cheat. They change the backlight level dynamically, according to the content sent to the screen. That destroys Photoshop calibration, for people who rely on their screen looking and behaving exactly the same way, for each picture edited. So in fact, someone doing Photoshop should stay away from the 1500:1 unit, as it is likely playing with the backlight. Some monitor specifications include the "cheating" number and the "honest" panel-related number for you. For example here, this monitor lists 8000:1 "dynamic contrast", suitable for movie content, and 1000:1 for the actual contrast of the panel itself. As long as the OSD has a feature so the user can disable dynamic contrast, then the monitor can be used for things other than movies. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16824001254 As another example, they review and discuss some expensive monitors here, and the basic contrast on one of them is still 500:1, the other 1000:1. But the monitors have some other qualities, that make them worthwhile, such as 178 degree viewing angle (so color doesn't vary from edge to edge while viewed). They might not make good gaming monitors, but would be better for Photoshop. http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/oth...onal-monitors_... * * Paul- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks for the extremely useful information. Also, do response times less than 12ms matter? The eye can barely see changes less than 12ms in visual information so I don't see how a response time of 8ms will make a difference over one say 5ms or even 2ms. The opinions on the net are mixed; Those with old LCD monitrs with 12ms respinse times saying they don't perceive ghosting, BLURRING or tearing in dynamic images, others saying that one should get the fastest monitor possible. Does anyone here have first hand experience of the effects of LCD response times? |
#7
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Do LCD response times less than 12ms matter?
blackhead wrote:
Thanks for the extremely useful information. Also, do response times less than 12ms matter? The eye can barely see changes less than 12ms in visual information so I don't see how a response time of 8ms will make a difference over one say 5ms or even 2ms. The opinions on the net are mixed; Those with old LCD monitrs with 12ms respinse times saying they don't perceive ghosting, BLURRING or tearing in dynamic images, others saying that one should get the fastest monitor possible. Does anyone here have first hand experience of the effects of LCD response times? http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/oth...arameters.html Paul |
#8
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Power dissipation of hannspree HG19WNY "New York" LCD monitor?
On 20 Feb, 18:22, "Jack R" wrote:
From the site you reference: * * * Power Consumption * * * ON Mode ? 36W * * * OFF Mode ? 1W * * * Jack R "blackhead" wrote in message ... Thinking of purchasing the Hannspree HG19WNY New York monitor for a self build computer system: http://www.hannspree.com/global/News...x?mid=109&n=36 Looks great value for money @ £100 approx $200 with 700:1 contrast ratio, 5ms response time, DVI/RGB inputs, brightness 300 cd/m2, but can't find its operational power dissipation. Anyone know where I can get the info? Thanks Looking at the power dissipation of 17" monitors, some have a figure as high as 45 Watts! whereas the Hanns-G 17" TFT LCD Monitor HW173AB has an impressive figure of just 28 watts. Are there others anyone would like to mention? |
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