Monitors
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Monitors
I think that my next upgrade is likely to be a monitor, because having an 8800GTS is likely to make up for the shortcomings of my other components for now, and I'm a little fed up with my current 17" CRT. Now I've been offered a 19" CRT for £30ish by our resident Dr, but I'll not be able to pick it up until early September, and I was thinking is it worth getting a LCD monitor instead?
Euyer have this one and this one available, which are at the top end of what I'd consider spending, but is it worth it over a 19" CRT? Space isn't really an issue cos I have a huge desk, but I know nothing about LCD monitors, and was always under the uninformed impression that without spending silly money on a flat-screen, CRTs actually have better displays. Am I wrong?
Euyer have this one and this one available, which are at the top end of what I'd consider spending, but is it worth it over a 19" CRT? Space isn't really an issue cos I have a huge desk, but I know nothing about LCD monitors, and was always under the uninformed impression that without spending silly money on a flat-screen, CRTs actually have better displays. Am I wrong?
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- Morbo
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O RLY? I always thought it excluded casing! A LCD monitor would be about a foot further away then my current one from where I sit, so might look a bit better than when right up close, but given my lack of botheredness either way I reckon cheaper might be better. Just thought I'd put it out there (fnar fnar) and see if there were any compelling arguments either way.
And Chicken - big LCDs being more expensive than second hand CRTs is not a compelling argument for LCDs.
And Chicken - big LCDs being more expensive than second hand CRTs is not a compelling argument for LCDs.
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- Morbo
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- Morbo
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http://www.pcmech.com/show/monitors/116/ probably covers the monitor size thing.
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- Cheese Lord
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- Throbbing Cupcake
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Lat, with a 8800 and a 17" crt you will probably have a dvi connector and a vga adaptor for the cable/monitor, if you can get a monitor that is dvi, your picture quality will improve. Neither of them have dvi connectors.
Edit- on ebuyer, the selection of monitors has dropped drastically, all the best ones have been bought, it might be best for you to wait until a few more are back in stock. this philips is the cheapest tft with dvi as far as I can tell.
Edit- on ebuyer, the selection of monitors has dropped drastically, all the best ones have been bought, it might be best for you to wait until a few more are back in stock. this philips is the cheapest tft with dvi as far as I can tell.
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- Weighted Storage Cube
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Since when have CRT's used DVI input? Can't say I've ever found one that does, although I could be wrong.HereComesPete wrote:Lat, with a 8800 and a 17" crt you will probably have a dvi connector and a vga adaptor for the cable/monitor, if you can get a monitor that is dvi, your picture quality will improve. Neither of them have dvi connectors.
Edit- on ebuyer, the selection of monitors has dropped drastically, all the best ones have been bought, it might be best for you to wait until a few more are back in stock. this philips is the cheapest tft with dvi as far as I can tell.
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- Throbbing Cupcake
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- Zombie
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the CRT size thing - they are normally measured by the size of the tube, ie somewhere inside the bezel.
Anywhooo, I wouldn't bother with a CRT.
TFTs are better in so many ways, and the slow response time of the early ones is really no longer a problem. Most seem to be 8-12ms now, which pretty much eliminate the issue.
Why would you think about CRT nowadays?
Anywhooo, I wouldn't bother with a CRT.
TFTs are better in so many ways, and the slow response time of the early ones is really no longer a problem. Most seem to be 8-12ms now, which pretty much eliminate the issue.
Why would you think about CRT nowadays?
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- Weighted Storage Cube
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I'll confess, the only reason why I'm still on CRT myself is because:
1) I've got essentially 2 desks and a desk level shelf, so loads of room.
2) Most LCD's are locked on refresh and resolution. I'm not spending £600ish on a top of the line to do what my free currently working (couple of lol moments occasionally, like going blue/red on a very hot day) crt can do.
3) Due to a bungled RMA a couple of years ago, I have a brand new working spare
1) I've got essentially 2 desks and a desk level shelf, so loads of room.
2) Most LCD's are locked on refresh and resolution. I'm not spending £600ish on a top of the line to do what my free currently working (couple of lol moments occasionally, like going blue/red on a very hot day) crt can do.
3) Due to a bungled RMA a couple of years ago, I have a brand new working spare
You are wrong. The Iiyama Vision Master Pro 453, for instance, has DVI input. The Iiyama 45x monitors were great, but I still wouldn't go back to CRT.buzzmong wrote:Since when have CRT's used DVI input? Can't say I've ever found one that does, although I could be wrong.
My current monitor cost me the equivalent of just under £120 (almost a year ago) - a lot less than my Vision Master Pro 451s cost back in the day. It's a reasonable size and resolution (20"/1400x1050), decent colour reproduction, and 8ms refresh. You certainly don't have to spend anything like £600 to get a very usable flat panel monitor.
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- Site Owner
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I used to see no need for LCDs as I had an unlimited supply of 17" CRTs from work's surplus, but I wanted widescreen on the new box.
Close colours are far more distinct on LCDs, and the response times and blurring I hated from the early ones are long gone.
Also even the cheap ones are now okay quality-wise. I have a £200 Asus 16:10 22" sat next to a £100 Acer 4:3 19", and with a much narrower bezel than CRTs, that gives me 2960x1050 of screen for 300 notes.
Close colours are far more distinct on LCDs, and the response times and blurring I hated from the early ones are long gone.
Also even the cheap ones are now okay quality-wise. I have a £200 Asus 16:10 22" sat next to a £100 Acer 4:3 19", and with a much narrower bezel than CRTs, that gives me 2960x1050 of screen for 300 notes.