Yeah this better not be TN junk, I have had enough of the TN based LCDs already!
I want to see more IPS based LCD's...these have the potential of being good for gamers which reasonable image quality (I'm happy with my NEC 20WGX2 Pro)
Been looking for a 24" but they are either junky TN or huge input lag VA panels.
I really do hope that this Viewsonic 120Hz panel is the real deal and will end up being the LCD we have been waiting for since 2001.
John
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My guess would be that it is a TN based panel, just because that would make it easier to make a 120Hz. LCD panel as TN panels have the lowest response times. A second reason for the use of a TN based panel would be to keep production costs down as TN panels are quite a bit cheaper than other panel types. It does give poorer image quality than other panels though, which is why I will probably not get this one.
Here is hoping though that this will spur other LCD manufacturers into making more of these proper 120Hz. displays, so that we will one day have 30" 10-bit 120Hz. LCD panels with something like BrightSide HDR technology. One can only dream of something like that, until OLED or something matures.
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i think the response time of non-TN panels is too slow to make a 120hz monitor
i think you need a time of less than 8ms BTW to avoid ghosting at 120hz
Last edited by natty; 08-30-2008 at 02:30 PM.
I can tell you right now, the LCD linked to in the OP won't be anything but TN. This is Viewsonic we're talking about after all. And I still don't believe it will be true 120Hz. No way a company goes from marketing overpriced gimmicks and junk to making the first 120Hz native LCD ever produced.
Oh and guys I hope you do not base response time based on the manufacturer rating. There is no set standard for measuring response time, and most manufactures use some kind of alternate measuring scale that makes the response time look lower than it actually is. Or they overvolt the panel to lower response time, but this causes evident smearing and snow. Yet others simply lie.
Viewsonic is not a company that can be taken at its word for their rated response time.
...Anyway enough about that. If you are looking for a 24" IPS based LCD, you are going to need to drop some cash, but they do exist. For example, the one I just got. An NEC LCD2490WUXiSV. It uses an H-IPS panel which is the successor to S-IPS. It improves on aperture ratio and gets rid of the "sparkly" look of S-IPS panels. It also has an A-TW polarizer which allows for very good black viewing angles and minimizes panel glow. 1920x1200 native.
The NEC also comes with a Gretag Macbeth colorimeter and the NEC SpectraView II software which is specifically designed for the NEC LCDxx90WUXi monitors (and a few others). Unlike normal calibration which is reliant on the video card and drivers, the monitors which are supported by SpectraView do their own internal calibration -- it is not reliant on drivers or the video card. Because of this it even stays consistent in games and such. The model I have is an 8-bit panel with a 12-bit LUT.
Calibrated with the Photo Editing setting, this monitor is absolutely insane. Especially the blacks -- which surprised me as it is an H-IPS panel. You have to see it to understand how good they are. Absolutely no backlight bleeding either. With the Photo Editing calibration, the contrast ratio is calibrated to 605:1 actual, and I thought that was rather low. Boy I was wrong. The difference between blacks and bright colors (such as HDR) is absolutely breathtaking for an LCD -- it far surpasses my old LG L2000C that had a contrast ratio of 1000:1, and had an S-IPS panel. If you can afford this monitor, it will be one of the best investments you make.
I notice no more ghosting or input delay than is present on typical TN "gaming" LCDs.
The issue with VA panels is not pixel response time (which affects ghosting), but rather actual input delay (think: the kind caused by v-sync, but to a lesser degree)
Last edited by 003; 08-30-2008 at 06:07 PM.
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Input lag is caused by the post-processing of the signal received from the video card that is why it is pressent in almoust all over-drive models atleast that is how I interpret it.
Before you complain about lag, think about Jesus. He lagged three days before respawning.
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For the absolute fastest lag-free output, it's ideal to play on a CRT at a higher refresh rate than the max. frames per second that the game is capped at, with vsync disabled (if the tearing is not too bad). For example, enabling vsync at 90 Hz would incur a penalty of approx. 11ms lag. Not too shabby, though..., compared to the usual 50-100ms lag of online play.
For single-player games that are not so dependent upon absolute fastest response times, the input lag of LCD's do not matter that much. It only bothers me in racing games, and of course online fragfests. What puzzles me is that when games add "motion blur", it appears redundant since most LCD's have bad enough ghosting that it looks like "built-in" motion blur (which is awful for fast-paced online games).
Triple buffering is only recommended if response times are not that important. At 60Hz, triple buffering would incur a full 32ms penalty. If your LCD already has a 50ms input lag penalty, add triple buffering to that for a total of 82ms lag. If you have a wireless keyboard/mouse, that would add 10ms or more depending on the polling rate and the receiver itself.
When I play to pwn, my refresh is set at 90Hz on my CRT, with the game capped at 85fps--and it usually stays at sustained 85fps, with vsync disabled. The tearing is barely noticeable--I'm quite used to it anyways. It's nowhere as bad as if the frame rates were at like 300fps with the refresh at only 60Hz or something like that (like doing a 3DMark2001 run).
One more thing.. CRT's also display ghosting when the contrast is turned all the way up. However, it's only relative to very bright lights against a dark background. It's very minor compared to a much bigger ghosting problem found on most LCD's nowadays. The "response time" on LCD's is all about the ghosting problem--when overdrive tries to get rid of that, it does not do it well enough many times. Sometimes, it's overly adjusted (like a droop). And the buffering time required to do the adjusting for overdrive is what makes the input lag so bad. Those online gamers pay the price, as LCD manufacturers only care about reducing the "response time" since most noob gamers think that's the solution. Overdrive does improve the IQ to a degree but what about the "ping" time that matters so much? Pathetic. We gamers really do need to voice out our concerns more for a specific product to meet our needs.
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Damn so this LCD is going to be TN
Anyway I know you guys are not fans of Viewsonic but back in the day, they did make ONE really good LCD....the VP191b, it wasn't bad and at the time was the best general purpose 19" LCD (as practically all others were TN or high response VA panels). The VP930 was not too bad either but then Viewsonic started to milk the money cow and churn out 1000's of TN based screens that were utter dross.
Thanks for the suggestion 003, I shall keep my eyes open for this NEC monitor as I am really fond of my current 20WGX2 Pro, however I have heard rumours that the 24" 2490 is not being shipped in Europe
Oh well here is hoping the 120Hz technology drifts over to IPS!
John
Stop looking at the walls, look out the window
any news?
QFT. My VX2025wm's DVI port died a while ago and when I called Viewsonic to request an RMA they told me that because it was more than a year old they only do repairs, not RMAs. So I was up sh*t creek at school with a non-functional monitor. Convinced me to order an E247WFP from Dell and send the Viewsonic back to be fixed, then sell the Viewsonic once I get it back.
Never buying another Viewsonic again if I can help it.
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it was the manufacturer's decision, not the pubic. imoSigh if people wouldn't have accepted LCDs so well, perhaps we'd have some better tech today already...
ive got 2 crt's: the philips is good, but the diamond digital is pretty dim unfortunately.
if i get any probs with either of my crts im going tn panel with low input lag/ response time.
Last edited by adamsleath; 10-20-2008 at 01:45 PM.
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I have the same monitor. Every time the DVI connector goes "dumb", I turn it off, I unplug all the cables (including power), press the power button, watch the green led go off (as the capacitors discharge), plug everything back, switch it on and... presto! DVI working again.
Same trick works with a Samsung monitor at work.
Fwiw the reason most gamers don't use LCD's is ghosting, which is not directly tied to refresh rates, more so response time. Would be very interested to see ghosting tests performed on this monitor.
I use an LCD for gaming and have learned to compensate if you will for ghosting, namely I need to aim ahead of my targets head, would be nice to be able to aim at a target again and not air.
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I don't avoid LCDs because of ghosting, even a cheap 4ms TN LG panel had perfectly fast enough responses IMO but what I miss is the 100 fps gaming for some games why I'm sticking to my CRT.
I'm gonna quote an excellent answer I saw on another forum when discussing this monitor which fully explains my own thoughts about refresh rate:
^ I believe this is the #1 reason there are many anxious gamers waiting for this 120Hz LCD to be released if it's indeed an improvement to motion smoothness if playing games above 60 FPS as it might finally bring CRT motion smoothness to LCD tech. That remains to be seen though...Originally Posted by eatbuckshot
Last edited by RPGWiZaRD; 10-21-2008 at 02:51 AM.
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I'm with you on that, I can distinguish up to ~100fps pretty easily but above that I can't tell any more.
Here's something interesting, if you're just watching a game can you see anything above ~60? The only way I can tell is how the game responds. I've been trained that ~100fps is "normal" by all the fps games I've played over the years, anything that *ever* dips below 60 makes me perceive the game to be running "choppily." I guess I'm spoiled, lol.
i have a flat screen TV that is 120 HZ but it isn't LCD or plasma its an older one so its still got a tube. Would that work like a 120 HZ monitor hooked up to my computer?
and yes when we first got it, it made everything look fake in movies and on normal TV. took a while to adjust
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