Source: Tom's Hardware UK – Keywords: Monitors, Displays
Categories: Hardware
DELL 2407WFP: Contd
Video games When it comes to applicability of use for gaming, we score out of 5. We try the screens under different game genres, FPS, RTS, RPG, etc. The screen’s reactivity is clearly the first point that interests us. Colour quality has an important place in this category too. The nicest thing here is how the screen manages an interpolation of a high quality enough to play in 1024 x 768 without image degredation.
In terms of video performance, we were seduced by its genuinely arresting contrast and excellent colour fidelity. The images are clean and nearly devoid of video noise thanks to a convincing S-PVA screen. The video can be a little jerky but the result is still great. It’s also impressive that it avoids scaling films in 1080p.
Video Here again our Score is out of 5 points. While latency has a part in this category, we also evaluate the amount of video noise introduced by the device. Good vewing angles are also crucial for those hoping to use a display for multimedia.
Performance / Price
Rather than estimate the quality/price relationship, we prefer to concentrate on the performance/price relationship. What’s the difference? The quality of an LCD screen is variable from one individual to the next.
One person looking for, say, a robust monitor for easy transport, even if the performance is mediocre, will be of one opinion. Another might be looking for a very fast monitor and might not care how it looks on the outside. These are just subjective opinions- And dammit, they make a pretty poor science. Instead we’ve resorted to just measuring the performance. This grade represents the performance of the screen when compared to our “Numerical Era” benchmark.
Conclusion
Dell has given us an inexpensive and good quality screen. Because Dell is adept at direct selling, they frequently have promotions on their website. At the time of writing the price is around €244, so be patient and wait for a good deal! We were happy to start the comparison with this screen because it offers very good video quality overall.
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"It also eliminates the screens smaller than 23” as they don’t feature a resolution compatible with Full-HD (better than to 1920 x 1080)."
Actually, Lenovo's L220x is a 22" 1920x1200 panel. The extra 2" of saved desk space matters if you have to fit it on your desk with another five monitors, or if you want to mount it beside a CRT of similar height. Bigger is probably better in a television, of course - and it's around the same price as 24" panels (at least, those with DVI), so you're not saving anything but space. I believe it also has issues with scaling, if not as badly as the first batch of 30" panels. It might be an interesting option for some readers, though - I was looking at one as a 1600SW replacement.
You can also get Viewsonic's 23" VP231WB WUXGA panel, but it's very expensive. I'm ignoring QWUXGA panels, too. None of these support HDCP.
There is no colour gamut for the Dell... Whoops!!
I personally would like to see some higher end 24" monitors added into the mix... Is it really worth those extra bucks to get a better (wider) colour gamut?? For example I have my eye on:
BENQ FP241VW
Which is a lot more expensive then the monitors reviewed here... But a TFT should last years and years (if it is turned off to save the backlight)... So surely it is worth spending more on a monitor than computer parts that will be obsolete after a few months!!
Lets at least revisit 24" monitors with a review of the high end in the near future please!! THG simply do the best reviews of TFTs on the web. However what happened to the latency response graphs you used to publish?
Bob
A wider colour gamut isn't necessarily a good thing for HDTV - so long as you can express the whole range of colours encoded in the standards, extra gamut just stretches the digital pixel levels further apart with some of the extreme values unused and makes calibration harder. This assumes you're trying to set up the HDTV to look as near to the specification as possible rather than shooting for extra-vibrant. The same isn't so true for colour-managed applications with wide gamut printing, so I won't turn down an Eizo CG221 (another WUXGA <24" monitor) for Photoshop work if someone offers it to me...
I've always been a little wary of black frame insertion (not that I've ever seen it in action, but one thing in favour of LCDs is the lack of flicker). The FP241VW looks interesting, though. I'd like to see a round-up of the high end too - perhaps getting to the bottom of exactly what Toshiba are offering with their apparently rebadged T221?
Incidentally, a friend is standing by the strategy of using a decent CRT (e.g. a GDM-FW900) as a desktop HDTV. It would be interesting to compare one with these flat panels, especially given the going rate for one on eBay.
Bob's right, though - THG monitor reviews are always worth reading. Here's hoping for more!
very good stockselling review. i believe you couldn't find older monitors in the market for sure.
and the prices you mention ... even in Greece these monitors are cheaper.
and what happened with all the amd reviews? and this, amd that, even OUR OWN SILENT HTPC is amd.
i don't have a problem with amd i'll buy a pundit p2-m2a690g and an athlon x2 4200 next week, i just try to understand what's going on here.
I want to buy a quality 24" monitor when I upgrade my PC as my old Iiyama VM Pro 454 is beginning to die a death. Please can we see some of the higher end stuff reviewed. Better still, can we actually see some more monitors reviewed?!
If you can search
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