| Gonzo |
So I found this for $99 AR... S/H is about $16. Does anyone have any experience with Hanns-G?
Hanns-G |
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| hfelknor |
I don't like the dot pitch of .29+
This will make it difficult to read small print. In other words small detail will be lost.
Most people say .28 at minimum is good.
I prefer .26 or better.
Homer |
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| Gonzo |
| Good point... I'm used to 0.264 mm on my current monitor. I bet I would notice. |
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| Kris |
| I do not think it will make the difference for "normal" usage. I am using the LD for photo editing and color calibration is the most important thing. For the price you cannot go wrong. Pitch is less important than resolution.. |
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| GripperDon |
quote: Originally posted by Kris
I do not think it will make the difference for "normal" usage. I am using the LD for photo editing and color calibration is the most important thing. For the price you cannot go wrong. Pitch is less important than resolution..
I think I agree, but if the Pitch is too course how can you get good resolution, wouldm't it effect resolution?
I am not knowledgable enough here would like to learn |
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| Kris |
Don,
pitch is a function of size and resolution (number of pixels).
My good quality ViwSonic is 19" and has 1280 x 1024 resolution, which is rather typical. What is the pitch? Effective image width is approximately 375 mm. If you divide it by 1280 (horizontal resolution) you get 0.29 mm.
My work laptop screen is 285 mm and 1400 resolution. So pitch is 0.20 mm. And I do not like it. The text is just too small. |
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| GripperDon |
I am going to order the screen.
PS.Just sold another houseboar from Holiday Marine in Lake lanier ! |
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| Eric L. |
| I find its a pretty big difference between 19" and 21" LCD's - yeah the price is an even greater difference, but unless you plan on running a dual monitor setup, I'd go for a 21" or 24" LCD as my one main screen. The display is the part of your computer you use 100% of the time, and your eyes will thank you for it. |
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| Kris |
quote: Originally posted by Gonzo
Good point... I'm used to 0.264 mm on my current monitor. I bet I would notice.
No, you will not. 0.290 - 0.264 = 0.026mm.
For you "imperial"guys it is equal to 0.001023622 inch. Can you see it? :D |
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