Backlight bleeding
Can someone explain to me what backlight bleeding is, and what it looks like?
I recently bought a Dell 2005FPW, and for one, it's amazing. Going from a '95ish CRT to a pretty crappy new one, to this baby is one helluva change. However, I'm wondering if I'm experiencing this problem with mine, or if it's just a normal artifact of LCD monitors (which would be pretty crappy).
For example, when I have this window open right now, it looks great because of how light everything is. In fact, in all but the darkest things, it looks great. But if I'm playing EVE, or watching Battlestar Galactica (which I just recently got into - great show), it's fairly dark. When it's dark/black enough, on all four corners there's kind of a halo of light extending from the most extreme points, shaped almost like the drooping parts of a stage curtain, but on all corners. I looked at my brother Panasonic (or something) LCD and it's got this effect on the top and bottom, but not as extreme.
When it gets dark out, I'll put on the "Blank" screensaver and take a picture without the flash... that should give you a pretty good idea of what I'm seeing. Is it worth paying and fussing over an RMA, or should I live with it since all LCDs do this?
I recently bought a Dell 2005FPW, and for one, it's amazing. Going from a '95ish CRT to a pretty crappy new one, to this baby is one helluva change. However, I'm wondering if I'm experiencing this problem with mine, or if it's just a normal artifact of LCD monitors (which would be pretty crappy).
For example, when I have this window open right now, it looks great because of how light everything is. In fact, in all but the darkest things, it looks great. But if I'm playing EVE, or watching Battlestar Galactica (which I just recently got into - great show), it's fairly dark. When it's dark/black enough, on all four corners there's kind of a halo of light extending from the most extreme points, shaped almost like the drooping parts of a stage curtain, but on all corners. I looked at my brother Panasonic (or something) LCD and it's got this effect on the top and bottom, but not as extreme.
When it gets dark out, I'll put on the "Blank" screensaver and take a picture without the flash... that should give you a pretty good idea of what I'm seeing. Is it worth paying and fussing over an RMA, or should I live with it since all LCDs do this?
0
Comments
Sorry, that wasn't a very constructive reply. It is hard for me to say since I have never used an LCD monitor of that size to date, but just for kicks I turned off all the lights in my office just now and minimized everything (My desktops are always pure black) and I noticed a miniscule amounts of backlight bleed. Nothing like what you are describing. I think you might have a defective monitor, and if it really bugs you, it may be worth RMAing.
You might be able to talk Dell into providing a FedEx or UPS label for return shipping. They always pay for return shipping at work when things get botched.
Good luck!
all of mine does it
I've gotten used to it, though. I usually have a black background of some kind on, so I've had a long time to get used to it. Personally, I prefer the halo thing over the weird discoloration in my 6-year old Trinitron
For comparison, here's a picture of my background right now. Look at some of the icons and the headphones - they're very black. "How much blacker could it get? And the answer is none - none more black."*
*Kudos if anyone gets the reference. Once of my favorite movies of all time.
Edit: That was stupid. A screenshot won't prove anything. I'll try a regular picture.
anyway mine barely does that at all.
just search dell's forums for "2005fpw backlight" and you'll see how much of a serious issue this is with these monitors, if that first picture is representative of how it actually looks then youre monitor looks totally washed out and I'd RMA it, Dell will pay to ship if it's under warranty which I have to assume it is.
ive got some minor blacklight bleeding, dont know if its worth going through all the bull of RMAing and trying to get a better one, ive heard of people going through like 4 or 5 of these trying to get a perfect one, honestly though if I wasnt looking for it because of all this stuff people posted i probably wouldnt even have a second thought, it seems the black is a little washed on the edges when watching a DVD and there are black bars around or whatever but its not really even noticeable in games and general use other than on a totally black background
Besides the backlight, on the left side of the screen I can see almost like straight ripples going upward for about 1 inch or so in. Goes up most of the edge of the monitor.
So much work to RMA, though...
Dell was pretty good about it, and if you have the standard 3 yr warranty I believe they are all "advance exchange" and they'll get one to you quickly along with a shipping label to send back the other one.
Read all of this on a 2405FPW review a while back, when they were doing 2005 vs. 2405 visual comparisons.
Either way I should probably RMA it. I was kind of accepting medicrity, which is not something that should be accepted in a $400 anything.
That is true, but I don't think the Revision comparison is the thing people were making it out to be to determine monitor quality. Most people thought that December 2005 and beyond monitors were "perfect" and no defects, but my first 2005FPW was a REV03 February 2006 and had problems, the new one is a March 06 Rev A03 and didn't have the problems with backlight bleeding, seems like it's still very much hit or miss.
entropy: the sticker on the back with the serial number lists the Rev number as well as the manufacture date. And yes you're exactly right, and that's why I returned mine, when you're dropping that kind of coin on something you shouldn't have to just "accept" common problems.
By the way: Revision A03, manufactured January 2006 in Mexico.
I called Dell's support, they tried to get me to go through the like troubleshooting "did you try it with another PC?" etc etc, I just kept saying yes I tried everything and its obviously the panel, they were pretty good about it though, shipped me another one next-day delivery.
The dont. I was just telling you what I did, it wasn't really that big of a deal or that much of a pain, you can't use any of the chat or email support things because monitors only have a serial number and not standard dell tag or express service code.