The NEC 90GX2' Taste Filters
Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: the, spring, 2006, lcd, collection
- 1. 19" LCDs: The Spring Collection
- 2. Design
- 3. Spatial Uniformity
- 4. Overshoot
- 5. BenQ FP91V
- 6. BenQ FP91V: Ho-Hum
- 7. Spatial Uniformity
- 8. Overshoot
- 9. Hyundai Q90U
- 10. Hyundai Q90U's Pitfalls
- 11. Spatial Uniformity
- 12. Overshoot
- 13. NEC 1980Fxi
- 14. NEC 1980Fxi: Real Class
- 15. Spatial Uniformity
- 16. Overshoot
- 17. NEC 90GX2
- 18. The NEC 90GX2' Taste Filters
- 19. Spatial Uniformity
- 20. Overshoot
- 21. Samsung 960BF
- 22. Samsung 960BF: Hand-Crafting
- 23. Spatial Uniformity
- 24. Overshoot
- 25. Samsung 970P
- 26. One Word About The Samsung 970P: Remarkable
- 27. Spatial Uniformity
- 28. Overshoot
- 29. Sony MFM-HT95
- 30. Sony MFM-HT95: Slightly Cold Colors
- 31. Spatial Uniformity
- 32. Overshoot
- 33. ViewSonic VX922
- 34. ViewSonic VX922: Respectable Colors
- 35. Spatial Uniformity
- 36. Overshoot
- 37. ViewSonic VP930
- 38. ViewSonic VP930: Color Fidelity, As Promised
- 39. Spatial Uniformity
- 40. Overshoot
- 41. Xerox Xa7-192i
- 42. Xerox Xa7-192i: A Static Monitor
- 43. Spatial Uniformity
- 44. Overshoot
- 45. Conclusion
18. The NEC 90GX2' Taste Filters
At the risk of sounding old-fashioned, I've said it before and I'll say it again: glare, "XBright," "X-Black," "Colorshine," "OptiClear" and other such filters are garbage. They're worthless. And sometimes they even decrease the quality of the colors, and can cause reflections if the monitor isn't in total darkness. At best, they appear to increase the contrast a little. That's it. Yes, they do provide flashy colors on displays in stores to trap innocent consumers. But you aren't an innocent consumer (since you read Tom's Hardware Guide), and we can't recommend too strongly that you be careful before you decide to buy a monitor with a shiny optical filter. The optical filter on LCD panels is a little like the fluorescent-orange chemical coloring you see on salmon steaks in supermarkets - it makes them look better, but they aren't.

In this case the results are nothing exceptional. While 90% of the colors were perfect, the 90GX2 had some difficulty in rendering the darkest colors.
| Black spot | White spot | Contrast |
|---|---|---|
| 0.6 | 307 | 511 : 1 |
The brightness is too high, as is often the case on monitors with optical filters. The black level is also too high, so you can forget about using this monitor for intensive office work and photo retouching. In any case, the flashy colors it puts out disqualify it for the latter.

The contrast was stable, but a 90% brightness setting gave us the best contrast. Of course that's a little too high, but when we moved away from that point, the contrast was reduced and the color rendering suffered.
The color gamut shows nothing extraordinary, but the range of colors adheres to the sRBG / 6500K standard.
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