Common LCD problems

What is ghosting?

Once upon a time, passive LCDs roamed the earth. Unfortunately, they were too slow and painful to look at for any extended period of time. 120ms response times assured anything over 7 frames per second left a lasting impression on your screen. Today, we have monitors that produce 16ms response times, although with the obvious sacrifice of color depth.

Perhaps almost half of the people we talk to misinterpret ghosting. By definition from the VESA Flat Panel Display Manual, ghosting is actually the problem of interference over the signal, which results in an “echoed” image. However, misuse has somewhat skewed the word’s definition to also mean problems due to poor response times. To make matters more confusing, ghosting in the signal sense of the word and in the response sense are very hard to tell apart sometimes (especially if you don’t know what to look for).

We polled a few users in our forums that had “ghosting” problems. Three out of the five retracted their problem after we made them replace the analog signal cable with a DVI cable. Thus, we can infer that only two users really suffered from problems with the response time.

The new trend in LCD measurements is shifting to gray-to-gray response times, rather than black-to-white. As we mentioned earlier, black-to-white response times usually do not represent the most real world operations of LCDs. Part II of this LCD FAQ will deal most explicitly with response time issues, so we will not get too far into the subject here. As a simple word of advice, we encourage you to take a look at the LCD that you plan on buying in a store before you buy it online. Stay tuned for our Response Time follow up to this FAQ.

Other Image Problems

One of the other common types of interference on LCD screens has more to do with poor power supplies. Occasionally, an LCD will display an image, but seconds later, the image still persists. Below is an example:

When the external brick overheats, we have noticed that its ability to produce clean signals degrades. Thus, the monitor does not properly modulate the signal. Our solution is to make sure your power supply is properly ventilated and not hot to the touch.

How to adjust your monitor correctly Fixing a dead (sub)pixel?
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  • Anonymous User - Thursday, September 4, 2003 - link

    Aaaahhhhh! Dr. Strangelove I presume.
  • dvinnen - Thursday, September 4, 2003 - link

    what's up with all the posts...

    it's really freakin me out...

    I'm used to the twice a month ones...

    Well, the bright side is this is suppose to be a boring strtch to Athlon 64 and Prescott release, wonder how many we'll get then.
  • Anonymous User - Thursday, September 4, 2003 - link

    Yup. I gave up on waiting for a quality LCD for gaming. Bought a NEC FP912 to last me the next couple of years.

    Maybe LCDs + gaming will be an uncompromised reality then.

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