Im selling my 1yr old LG 22" LCD L226WTQ-BL
Specs:
Contrast Ratio~ 3000:1
Resolution~ 1680x1050
Aspect Ratio~ 16:10
Response Time (GtG)~ 2ms
Brightness~ 300 cd/mē
Power consumption~ 45 W
Weight (kg)~ 6kg
Price: 8.5k
http://i00.twenga.com/p/29/50/152950vb.png
http://www.apiastos.gr/images/LG-L22...I-22-27163.jpg
RFS: need money and i have another monitor that im currently using.
Info:
* Size (Size in inches)
The diagonal of the display in inches.
* Contrast (Contrast ratio)
Contrast is the difference between the brightest and darkest areas of the image. Contrast is given as a ratio between the brightest and the darkest areas, e.g. 800:1, and the higher the number the better the contrast.
* Aspect (Aspect ratio)
Aspect ratio is the width to height ratio of the projected image. Most often the aspect ratio is either 16:9 (widescreen) or 4:3. See more here
* Resolution (Native resolution)
Resolution is the number of horizontal pixels times the number of vertical pixels of the display area. Unlike older CRT monitors, flat screen monitors display information well only at the resolution they are designed for (a.k.a. the native resolution). This is due to the structure of the display, which has a fixed set of both vertical and horizontal dots (corresponding the resolution). If the resolution is changed, the display needs to scale the image to fit the screen.
* Brightness (Brightness)
Brightness (luminance) measures the amount of light the display produces. It is given as candelas per square meter (cd/m2). Usually the monitor with a higher luminance is concidered to be better one. A high luminance (such as 500 cd/m2) is desirable, if the monitor is used for viewing movies or other such entertainment.
* Response time (GtG) (Response time)
The response rate indicates how fast the monitor's pixels can change colors and it is measured as the time it takes for a pixel to change from one color to another and back. The rate is given as the transformation speed from Gray-to-Gray (GtG) in milliseconds (ms). Faster is better as it reduces the so called ghosting effect of a moving image (i.e. the trail or "ghost" of the previous image that stays is still faintly visible on the background).



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