LG W2363D appears on german LG-Website Out now ?!?!?
  1 / 2    
LG's 3D-monitor seems to be in final stage. And it seems to have a LED-backlight but I'm not sure.
[url="http://www.lg.com/de/it-produkte/tft-lcd-monitore/LG-monitor-tv-W2363D.jsp"]http://www.lg.com/de/it-produkte/tft-lcd-m...r-tv-W2363D.jsp[/url]
It would be interresting how it performs against the Acer and the Alienware.


[quote][img]http://www.lg.com/de/it-produkte/images/lg-Monitors-W2363D-Large.jpg[/img]
[b]Eigenschaften:[/b]
Display-Typ: TFT-LCD Aktiv Matrix mit WHITE LED Backlight
Bildschirmgröße (Zoll): 23
Bildschirmgröße (cm): 58,42
Bildschirmformat: 16:9
Aktive Bildfläche: 509,17 mm x 286,41 mm
Pixel Pitch: 0,265 mm x 0,265 mm
Pixelkonfiguration: RGB Streifen
Weitwinkeltechnologie: TN (Twisted Nematic)
Oberflächenvergütung: Hard Coating (3H) Anti-glare
Farbdarstellung: 16,7 Mio.
Maximale Auflösung: 1.920 x 1.080 digital
Physikalische Auflösung: 1.920 x 1.080
Helligkeit (cd/m²): 300
Kontrastverhältnis: 70.000:1 mit DFC (statisch 1.000:1)
Responszeit: 3 ms (GTG)
Blickwinkel: 170° horizontal, 160° vertikal
Horiz. Frequenzbereich: 30-83 kHz
Vert. Frequenzbereich: 56–120 Hz
Pixelfrequenz: 135 MHz
Multiscan Support: Ja
Speichermodi: 13 voreingestellte, 10 benutzerdefinierbare
Full HD: Ja

Spannungsbereich: 90 - 264 Vac, 47 - 63 Hz
Leistungsaufnahme: Betrieb: <42 W, Stand-by: <1 W, Aus <1 W
Maße (B x H x T) in mm: 555,5 x 419,2 x 206
Gewicht: 5 kg
Neigungswinkel: 15° nach oben, 5° nach unten
Gehäusefarbe: Mattschwarz[/quote]
LG's 3D-monitor seems to be in final stage. And it seems to have a LED-backlight but I'm not sure.

http://www.lg.com/de/it-produkte/tft-lcd-m...r-tv-W2363D.jsp

It would be interresting how it performs against the Acer and the Alienware.





Image

Eigenschaften:

Display-Typ: TFT-LCD Aktiv Matrix mit WHITE LED Backlight

Bildschirmgröße (Zoll): 23

Bildschirmgröße (cm): 58,42

Bildschirmformat: 16:9

Aktive Bildfläche: 509,17 mm x 286,41 mm

Pixel Pitch: 0,265 mm x 0,265 mm

Pixelkonfiguration: RGB Streifen

Weitwinkeltechnologie: TN (Twisted Nematic)

Oberflächenvergütung: Hard Coating (3H) Anti-glare

Farbdarstellung: 16,7 Mio.

Maximale Auflösung: 1.920 x 1.080 digital

Physikalische Auflösung: 1.920 x 1.080

Helligkeit (cd/m²): 300

Kontrastverhältnis: 70.000:1 mit DFC (statisch 1.000:1)

Responszeit: 3 ms (GTG)

Blickwinkel: 170° horizontal, 160° vertikal

Horiz. Frequenzbereich: 30-83 kHz

Vert. Frequenzbereich: 56–120 Hz

Pixelfrequenz: 135 MHz

Multiscan Support: Ja

Speichermodi: 13 voreingestellte, 10 benutzerdefinierbare

Full HD: Ja



Spannungsbereich: 90 - 264 Vac, 47 - 63 Hz

Leistungsaufnahme: Betrieb: <42 W, Stand-by: <1 W, Aus <1 W

Maße (B x H x T) in mm: 555,5 x 419,2 x 206

Gewicht: 5 kg

Neigungswinkel: 15° nach oben, 5° nach unten

Gehäusefarbe: Mattschwarz

Desktop-PC

i7 870 @ 3.8GHz + MSI GTX1070 Gaming X + 16GB RAM + Win10 64Bit Home + AW2310+3D-Vision

#1
Posted 07/01/2010 09:18 PM   
LG's 3D-monitor seems to be in final stage. And it seems to have a LED-backlight but I'm not sure.
[url="http://www.lg.com/de/it-produkte/tft-lcd-monitore/LG-monitor-tv-W2363D.jsp"]http://www.lg.com/de/it-produkte/tft-lcd-m...r-tv-W2363D.jsp[/url]
It would be interresting how it performs against the Acer and the Alienware.


[quote][img]http://www.lg.com/de/it-produkte/images/lg-Monitors-W2363D-Large.jpg[/img]
[b]Eigenschaften:[/b]
Display-Typ: TFT-LCD Aktiv Matrix mit WHITE LED Backlight
Bildschirmgröße (Zoll): 23
Bildschirmgröße (cm): 58,42
Bildschirmformat: 16:9
Aktive Bildfläche: 509,17 mm x 286,41 mm
Pixel Pitch: 0,265 mm x 0,265 mm
Pixelkonfiguration: RGB Streifen
Weitwinkeltechnologie: TN (Twisted Nematic)
Oberflächenvergütung: Hard Coating (3H) Anti-glare
Farbdarstellung: 16,7 Mio.
Maximale Auflösung: 1.920 x 1.080 digital
Physikalische Auflösung: 1.920 x 1.080
Helligkeit (cd/m²): 300
Kontrastverhältnis: 70.000:1 mit DFC (statisch 1.000:1)
Responszeit: 3 ms (GTG)
Blickwinkel: 170° horizontal, 160° vertikal
Horiz. Frequenzbereich: 30-83 kHz
Vert. Frequenzbereich: 56–120 Hz
Pixelfrequenz: 135 MHz
Multiscan Support: Ja
Speichermodi: 13 voreingestellte, 10 benutzerdefinierbare
Full HD: Ja

Spannungsbereich: 90 - 264 Vac, 47 - 63 Hz
Leistungsaufnahme: Betrieb: <42 W, Stand-by: <1 W, Aus <1 W
Maße (B x H x T) in mm: 555,5 x 419,2 x 206
Gewicht: 5 kg
Neigungswinkel: 15° nach oben, 5° nach unten
Gehäusefarbe: Mattschwarz[/quote]
LG's 3D-monitor seems to be in final stage. And it seems to have a LED-backlight but I'm not sure.

http://www.lg.com/de/it-produkte/tft-lcd-m...r-tv-W2363D.jsp

It would be interresting how it performs against the Acer and the Alienware.





Image

Eigenschaften:

Display-Typ: TFT-LCD Aktiv Matrix mit WHITE LED Backlight

Bildschirmgröße (Zoll): 23

Bildschirmgröße (cm): 58,42

Bildschirmformat: 16:9

Aktive Bildfläche: 509,17 mm x 286,41 mm

Pixel Pitch: 0,265 mm x 0,265 mm

Pixelkonfiguration: RGB Streifen

Weitwinkeltechnologie: TN (Twisted Nematic)

Oberflächenvergütung: Hard Coating (3H) Anti-glare

Farbdarstellung: 16,7 Mio.

Maximale Auflösung: 1.920 x 1.080 digital

Physikalische Auflösung: 1.920 x 1.080

Helligkeit (cd/m²): 300

Kontrastverhältnis: 70.000:1 mit DFC (statisch 1.000:1)

Responszeit: 3 ms (GTG)

Blickwinkel: 170° horizontal, 160° vertikal

Horiz. Frequenzbereich: 30-83 kHz

Vert. Frequenzbereich: 56–120 Hz

Pixelfrequenz: 135 MHz

Multiscan Support: Ja

Speichermodi: 13 voreingestellte, 10 benutzerdefinierbare

Full HD: Ja



Spannungsbereich: 90 - 264 Vac, 47 - 63 Hz

Leistungsaufnahme: Betrieb: <42 W, Stand-by: <1 W, Aus <1 W

Maße (B x H x T) in mm: 555,5 x 419,2 x 206

Gewicht: 5 kg

Neigungswinkel: 15° nach oben, 5° nach unten

Gehäusefarbe: Mattschwarz

Desktop-PC

i7 870 @ 3.8GHz + MSI GTX1070 Gaming X + 16GB RAM + Win10 64Bit Home + AW2310+3D-Vision

#2
Posted 07/01/2010 09:18 PM   
It has already been out.

Here is a short clip of the review:
[quote]As a conclusion I can say that the LG W2363D is really a good step towards improving the 120Hz LCD monitors for providing better and better results in stereo 3D mode. No input lag, little ghosting, nice feature set. The LG is comparable to the competition and even bests other good displays like the Acer GD245HQ/GD235HZ in some aspects, but that comes with a bit higher price level than that of the Acer… though still cheaper than the Alienware. So if you already have a first generation 120Hz LCD from Samsung or ViewSonic you may still want to keep it and wait for even better new models, unless you really want to upgrade. But if you are currently thinking of buying your first 120Hz 3D-capable LCD monitor then the LG might be almost the perfect choice for you, at least for now, but depending on how you plan to use it and for what the Acer might also be a very good alternative choice.[/quote]

Review can be found here: [url="http://3dvision-blog.com/review-of-the-23-lg-w2363d-120hz-full-hd-3d-gaming-monitor/"]http://3dvision-blog.com/review-of-the-23-...gaming-monitor/[/url]
It has already been out.



Here is a short clip of the review:

As a conclusion I can say that the LG W2363D is really a good step towards improving the 120Hz LCD monitors for providing better and better results in stereo 3D mode. No input lag, little ghosting, nice feature set. The LG is comparable to the competition and even bests other good displays like the Acer GD245HQ/GD235HZ in some aspects, but that comes with a bit higher price level than that of the Acer… though still cheaper than the Alienware. So if you already have a first generation 120Hz LCD from Samsung or ViewSonic you may still want to keep it and wait for even better new models, unless you really want to upgrade. But if you are currently thinking of buying your first 120Hz 3D-capable LCD monitor then the LG might be almost the perfect choice for you, at least for now, but depending on how you plan to use it and for what the Acer might also be a very good alternative choice.




Review can be found here: http://3dvision-blog.com/review-of-the-23-...gaming-monitor/

#3
Posted 07/02/2010 12:32 AM   
It has already been out.

Here is a short clip of the review:
[quote]As a conclusion I can say that the LG W2363D is really a good step towards improving the 120Hz LCD monitors for providing better and better results in stereo 3D mode. No input lag, little ghosting, nice feature set. The LG is comparable to the competition and even bests other good displays like the Acer GD245HQ/GD235HZ in some aspects, but that comes with a bit higher price level than that of the Acer… though still cheaper than the Alienware. So if you already have a first generation 120Hz LCD from Samsung or ViewSonic you may still want to keep it and wait for even better new models, unless you really want to upgrade. But if you are currently thinking of buying your first 120Hz 3D-capable LCD monitor then the LG might be almost the perfect choice for you, at least for now, but depending on how you plan to use it and for what the Acer might also be a very good alternative choice.[/quote]

Review can be found here: [url="http://3dvision-blog.com/review-of-the-23-lg-w2363d-120hz-full-hd-3d-gaming-monitor/"]http://3dvision-blog.com/review-of-the-23-...gaming-monitor/[/url]
It has already been out.



Here is a short clip of the review:

As a conclusion I can say that the LG W2363D is really a good step towards improving the 120Hz LCD monitors for providing better and better results in stereo 3D mode. No input lag, little ghosting, nice feature set. The LG is comparable to the competition and even bests other good displays like the Acer GD245HQ/GD235HZ in some aspects, but that comes with a bit higher price level than that of the Acer… though still cheaper than the Alienware. So if you already have a first generation 120Hz LCD from Samsung or ViewSonic you may still want to keep it and wait for even better new models, unless you really want to upgrade. But if you are currently thinking of buying your first 120Hz 3D-capable LCD monitor then the LG might be almost the perfect choice for you, at least for now, but depending on how you plan to use it and for what the Acer might also be a very good alternative choice.




Review can be found here: http://3dvision-blog.com/review-of-the-23-...gaming-monitor/

#4
Posted 07/02/2010 12:32 AM   
Im hanging out for the "Asus PG-276". Its a 2ms 27'' monster that was SUPPOSED to be out in june... Still no sign of it /confused.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':confused:' />
I wish manufacturers would lay off the black gloss though !!! It reflects and shows dust too easily !!

I think 2ms is going to be fairly standard with s3d monitors from now on. Let hope so :P
Im hanging out for the "Asus PG-276". Its a 2ms 27'' monster that was SUPPOSED to be out in june... Still no sign of it /confused.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':confused:' />

I wish manufacturers would lay off the black gloss though !!! It reflects and shows dust too easily !!



I think 2ms is going to be fairly standard with s3d monitors from now on. Let hope so :P

#5
Posted 07/02/2010 04:42 AM   
Im hanging out for the "Asus PG-276". Its a 2ms 27'' monster that was SUPPOSED to be out in june... Still no sign of it /confused.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':confused:' />
I wish manufacturers would lay off the black gloss though !!! It reflects and shows dust too easily !!

I think 2ms is going to be fairly standard with s3d monitors from now on. Let hope so :P
Im hanging out for the "Asus PG-276". Its a 2ms 27'' monster that was SUPPOSED to be out in june... Still no sign of it /confused.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':confused:' />

I wish manufacturers would lay off the black gloss though !!! It reflects and shows dust too easily !!



I think 2ms is going to be fairly standard with s3d monitors from now on. Let hope so :P

#6
Posted 07/02/2010 04:42 AM   
[quote name='CamRaiD' post='1081437' date='Jul 2 2010, 12:42 AM']Im hanging out for the "Asus PG-276". Its a 2ms 27'' monster that was SUPPOSED to be out in june... Still no sign of it /confused.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':confused:' />
I wish manufacturers would lay off the black gloss though !!! It reflects and shows dust too easily !!

I think 2ms is going to be fairly standard with s3d monitors from now on. Let hope so :P[/quote]
Ya 2ms and low input lag are prereqs for the 8.3ms between refresh for 120Hz operation, really love these 120Hz because of that even though they're TN.

As for that Asus, I think it would be a great combination of size and resolution with the ease of desktop monitor, but its been continuously delayed and not even a pip about it at Computex early last month. I think they're having problems with the larger panel size as there's already problems with uniform refresh/ghosting/overdrive on the periphery of the 23-24" panels.

LED backlight on this LG is somewhat interesting if only for the lower operating temps compared to CCFL; from what I've seen however it doesn't really help with the potential of backlight bleed with TNs. I wonder what happened to the updated Viewsonic? It was the nicest looking panel aesthetically imo, maybe even nicer looking than the AW.
[quote name='CamRaiD' post='1081437' date='Jul 2 2010, 12:42 AM']Im hanging out for the "Asus PG-276". Its a 2ms 27'' monster that was SUPPOSED to be out in june... Still no sign of it /confused.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':confused:' />

I wish manufacturers would lay off the black gloss though !!! It reflects and shows dust too easily !!



I think 2ms is going to be fairly standard with s3d monitors from now on. Let hope so :P

Ya 2ms and low input lag are prereqs for the 8.3ms between refresh for 120Hz operation, really love these 120Hz because of that even though they're TN.



As for that Asus, I think it would be a great combination of size and resolution with the ease of desktop monitor, but its been continuously delayed and not even a pip about it at Computex early last month. I think they're having problems with the larger panel size as there's already problems with uniform refresh/ghosting/overdrive on the periphery of the 23-24" panels.



LED backlight on this LG is somewhat interesting if only for the lower operating temps compared to CCFL; from what I've seen however it doesn't really help with the potential of backlight bleed with TNs. I wonder what happened to the updated Viewsonic? It was the nicest looking panel aesthetically imo, maybe even nicer looking than the AW.

-=HeliX=- Mod 3DV Game Fixes
My 3D Vision Games List Ratings

Intel Core i7 5930K @4.5GHz | Gigabyte X99 Gaming 5 | Win10 x64 Pro | Corsair H105
Nvidia GeForce Titan X SLI Hybrid | ROG Swift PG278Q 144Hz + 3D Vision/G-Sync | 32GB Adata DDR4 2666
Intel Samsung 950Pro SSD | Samsung EVO 4x1 RAID 0 |
Yamaha VX-677 A/V Receiver | Polk Audio RM6880 7.1 | LG Blu-Ray
Auzen X-Fi HT HD | Logitech G710/G502/G27 | Corsair Air 540 | EVGA P2-1200W

#7
Posted 07/02/2010 05:02 AM   
[quote name='CamRaiD' post='1081437' date='Jul 2 2010, 12:42 AM']Im hanging out for the "Asus PG-276". Its a 2ms 27'' monster that was SUPPOSED to be out in june... Still no sign of it /confused.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':confused:' />
I wish manufacturers would lay off the black gloss though !!! It reflects and shows dust too easily !!

I think 2ms is going to be fairly standard with s3d monitors from now on. Let hope so :P[/quote]
Ya 2ms and low input lag are prereqs for the 8.3ms between refresh for 120Hz operation, really love these 120Hz because of that even though they're TN.

As for that Asus, I think it would be a great combination of size and resolution with the ease of desktop monitor, but its been continuously delayed and not even a pip about it at Computex early last month. I think they're having problems with the larger panel size as there's already problems with uniform refresh/ghosting/overdrive on the periphery of the 23-24" panels.

LED backlight on this LG is somewhat interesting if only for the lower operating temps compared to CCFL; from what I've seen however it doesn't really help with the potential of backlight bleed with TNs. I wonder what happened to the updated Viewsonic? It was the nicest looking panel aesthetically imo, maybe even nicer looking than the AW.
[quote name='CamRaiD' post='1081437' date='Jul 2 2010, 12:42 AM']Im hanging out for the "Asus PG-276". Its a 2ms 27'' monster that was SUPPOSED to be out in june... Still no sign of it /confused.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':confused:' />

I wish manufacturers would lay off the black gloss though !!! It reflects and shows dust too easily !!



I think 2ms is going to be fairly standard with s3d monitors from now on. Let hope so :P

Ya 2ms and low input lag are prereqs for the 8.3ms between refresh for 120Hz operation, really love these 120Hz because of that even though they're TN.



As for that Asus, I think it would be a great combination of size and resolution with the ease of desktop monitor, but its been continuously delayed and not even a pip about it at Computex early last month. I think they're having problems with the larger panel size as there's already problems with uniform refresh/ghosting/overdrive on the periphery of the 23-24" panels.



LED backlight on this LG is somewhat interesting if only for the lower operating temps compared to CCFL; from what I've seen however it doesn't really help with the potential of backlight bleed with TNs. I wonder what happened to the updated Viewsonic? It was the nicest looking panel aesthetically imo, maybe even nicer looking than the AW.

-=HeliX=- Mod 3DV Game Fixes
My 3D Vision Games List Ratings

Intel Core i7 5930K @4.5GHz | Gigabyte X99 Gaming 5 | Win10 x64 Pro | Corsair H105
Nvidia GeForce Titan X SLI Hybrid | ROG Swift PG278Q 144Hz + 3D Vision/G-Sync | 32GB Adata DDR4 2666
Intel Samsung 950Pro SSD | Samsung EVO 4x1 RAID 0 |
Yamaha VX-677 A/V Receiver | Polk Audio RM6880 7.1 | LG Blu-Ray
Auzen X-Fi HT HD | Logitech G710/G502/G27 | Corsair Air 540 | EVGA P2-1200W

#8
Posted 07/02/2010 05:02 AM   
Just one note on LED backlight.... LED backlight = less heat.
From what I read here people claim current LCD's need some 'warm-up' time to perform to their fullest, so - does this mean LED backlit monitor could suffer because of it, as they produce less heat and thus are less warm - and potentially could be a bit slower due to it?
Just one note on LED backlight.... LED backlight = less heat.

From what I read here people claim current LCD's need some 'warm-up' time to perform to their fullest, so - does this mean LED backlit monitor could suffer because of it, as they produce less heat and thus are less warm - and potentially could be a bit slower due to it?

#9
Posted 07/02/2010 07:53 AM   
Just one note on LED backlight.... LED backlight = less heat.
From what I read here people claim current LCD's need some 'warm-up' time to perform to their fullest, so - does this mean LED backlit monitor could suffer because of it, as they produce less heat and thus are less warm - and potentially could be a bit slower due to it?
Just one note on LED backlight.... LED backlight = less heat.

From what I read here people claim current LCD's need some 'warm-up' time to perform to their fullest, so - does this mean LED backlit monitor could suffer because of it, as they produce less heat and thus are less warm - and potentially could be a bit slower due to it?

#10
Posted 07/02/2010 07:53 AM   
The "warm-up" time is not related to actually getting the CCFL tubes hot in order for them to perform better (they can actually be damaged from extensive heat), but refers to the fact that they need some time to be active in order to achieve the best performance, again that is not related to them getting or not hotter... ;)
The "warm-up" time is not related to actually getting the CCFL tubes hot in order for them to perform better (they can actually be damaged from extensive heat), but refers to the fact that they need some time to be active in order to achieve the best performance, again that is not related to them getting or not hotter... ;)

My 3D Vision Blog - 3dvision-blog.com

#11
Posted 07/02/2010 09:05 AM   
The "warm-up" time is not related to actually getting the CCFL tubes hot in order for them to perform better (they can actually be damaged from extensive heat), but refers to the fact that they need some time to be active in order to achieve the best performance, again that is not related to them getting or not hotter... ;)
The "warm-up" time is not related to actually getting the CCFL tubes hot in order for them to perform better (they can actually be damaged from extensive heat), but refers to the fact that they need some time to be active in order to achieve the best performance, again that is not related to them getting or not hotter... ;)

My 3D Vision Blog - 3dvision-blog.com

#12
Posted 07/02/2010 09:05 AM   
As far as I understood it was related to temperature of crystals themselves -> LCD crystals warmer -> more liquid -> faster transitions.
As far as I understood it was related to temperature of crystals themselves -> LCD crystals warmer -> more liquid -> faster transitions.

#13
Posted 07/02/2010 09:09 AM   
As far as I understood it was related to temperature of crystals themselves -> LCD crystals warmer -> more liquid -> faster transitions.
As far as I understood it was related to temperature of crystals themselves -> LCD crystals warmer -> more liquid -> faster transitions.

#14
Posted 07/02/2010 09:09 AM   
The LCD crystals all have an optimal working temperature range, using them below that might lead to no so good results. Usually above 20 decrees Celsius everything should be fine in terms of optimal working and visual parameters. However at the moment you turn on the monitor the panel might be cold and it may require a few minutes before it reaches the optimum working temperature range (20+ degrees Celsius), but that is also dependent on the room's ambient temperature. The LCD panel gets hotter not because of the backlight, but mostly because of the voltage being sent to each pixel in order for it to change its state. And before the optimal working temperature range is reached the response time of the pixels is usually a bit slower and this may lead to increased ghosting, but usually just a minute or two is enough for that optimal temperature range to be reached...
The LCD crystals all have an optimal working temperature range, using them below that might lead to no so good results. Usually above 20 decrees Celsius everything should be fine in terms of optimal working and visual parameters. However at the moment you turn on the monitor the panel might be cold and it may require a few minutes before it reaches the optimum working temperature range (20+ degrees Celsius), but that is also dependent on the room's ambient temperature. The LCD panel gets hotter not because of the backlight, but mostly because of the voltage being sent to each pixel in order for it to change its state. And before the optimal working temperature range is reached the response time of the pixels is usually a bit slower and this may lead to increased ghosting, but usually just a minute or two is enough for that optimal temperature range to be reached...

My 3D Vision Blog - 3dvision-blog.com

#15
Posted 07/02/2010 09:28 AM   
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