SM2053BW/20 TFT 1680x1050 wide Black

  • £184.32
  • £216.58 inc. VAT
  • Availability: 518 in stock
  • Product Code: A0428239
  • Manufacturers #: LS20AQWJFV
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Product Description

Product Features
Display Type - LCD Monitor
Monitor - 20ins
Brightness - 300cd/m2
Contrast Ratio - 1000:1 (Static) 8000:1 (Dynamic)
Response time - 5/2ms
Case Colour - Black Gloss

This stunning widescreen monitor has the style and features you need to work efficiently and enjoy all your digital entertainment. The slim design is as beautiful as the amazing colour quality that brightens the 20 inch screen. The 8000:1 contrast ratio delivers extremely sharp details and the 2ms response time virtually eliminates any motion blur. The 2053BW is more than just a pretty face—it’s the total package. It's all in the details. Everything you see becomes perfectly clear with an amazing 1680 x 1050 resolution. Complimented with a slim, stylish design, this widescreen is a perfect fit no matter where you use it. Response time refers to how long it takes pixels to turn from completely white to black and back again. The lower the milliseconds (ms), the faster the response time is. A very fast 2ms response time virtually eliminates any blurring, making this monitor perfect for enjoying video games and all of your digital entertainment.

SM2053BW/20 TFT 1680x1050 wide Black

 

Technical Specifications

Basic Specifications
Manufacturer's Part Number LS20AQWJFV

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Aspect Ratio

The standard proportion in width to height for a computer monitor is 4:3, but some new displays have a wider format: 16:9 or 16:10, designed for viewing movies or HDTV in wide format. Note that a 17-inch wide-format panel has about the same vertical dimension and vertical pixel count as a normal 15-inch panel, so you get about 120 percent of the viewing area of a 15-inch panel. A 17-inch standard panel, however, has 130 percent of the viewing area of a standard 15-inch screen.

Contrast Ratio

A spec much hyped by manufacturers (be suspicious of their claims), this is the difference in light intensity between the brightest white and the deepest black.

Digital and Analog Connections

LCDs are digital devices and thus have to convert analog (VGA) signals before they can be displayed. A graphics card with a digital video interface (DVI) can send the signal straight to the display in digital format--no conversion required. At this point, most monitors do such a good job of signal conversion that digital connections are not as important as they used to be.

Portrait/Landscape Modes

Some LCDs pivot so that the longer edge can go horizontal (landscape mode) or vertical (portrait mode). This feature can be useful for desktop publishing, Web surfing, and viewing large spreadsheets, but don't pay extra for it if you won't use it.

Luminance

Brightness; a measure of how much light a panel can produce. Luminance is expressed in either nits or candelas per square meter (cd/m2). A measurement of 200 to 250 nits is OK for most productivity tasks; 500 nits is better for TV and movies.

Pixel-Response Rate

This refers to how quickly a pixel can change colors, measured in milliseconds (ms); the lower the milliseconds, the faster the pixels can change, reducing the ghosting or streaking effect you might see in a moving or changing image. In general, manufacturers' specifications rely on best-case scenarios; real-world performance could be slower. A maximum response time of 12ms to 15ms across the spectrum is required for gaming or viewing television and movies without ghosting or streaking. Manufacturers have debuted LCDs with response rates as fast as 2ms.

Resolution

Make sure you are comfortable with an LCD's native resolution before you buy it. Remember, an LCD that scales its image to a nonnative resolution will never look as good.

Viewing angle

The physical structure of LCD pixels can cause the brightness and even the color of images to shift if you view them from an angle rather than facing the screen directly. Take manufacturer's specifications with a grain of salt and make your own observations if possible; viewing-angle issues become more critical as panel size increases.

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