Pixels fault?

Starfruit

New Member
I have a problem, when i look at film, I have a blurred picture. I have a new LG TFT, hm the pixels is blurred, what is the wrong, note I happend dammage to piggs on the cpu, and i dont't know if it can be the problem. Please help me, can I test my cpu, if you think I have a cpu problem.
 
Cromewell said:
Is it blury for static images as well or just when something is moving?
I'm not sure but I think small pictures is blury too, but I don't know? But big picture (1204x768 and over) is good. So maybe it's onlye film:s
 
oh ok I think I understand what's going on. I suspect when you are watching videos your screen is running on a non-native resolution making the picture terrible. If you can force it to run 1024x768 (or whatever native is for your TFT) you wont get such a bad picture
 
Cromewell said:
oh ok I think I understand what's going on. I suspect when you are watching videos your screen is running on a non-native resolution making the picture terrible. If you can force it to run 1024x768 (or whatever native is for your TFT) you wont get such a bad picture

But in the monitor folder they recommend to run 1280x1024 and 60 hz.
 
Then that is probably it's native resolution and force it to run at 1280x1024 as much as possible
 
Wouldn't hurt to mention the model and number besides LG TFT as this dont say much. What is the response of your monitor?
 
Well everything Cromwell has said makes sense and could very possibly cause your ghosting. The monitor itself seems to be a decent one and my knowledge of LCDs is limited. As for damaged pins on the CPU this is never a good thing but if your computer is running without crashes etc. then I would suggest this has nothing to do with the problem as they just are not closely enough related. So basically if your computer runs stable besides the screen problem I would not think its your CPU at all.
 
Blue said:
Well everything Cromwell has said makes sense and could very possibly cause your ghosting. The monitor itself seems to be a decent one and my knowledge of LCDs is limited. As for damaged pins on the CPU this is never a good thing but if your computer is running without crashes etc. then I would suggest this has nothing to do with the problem as they just are not closely enough related. So basically if your computer runs stable besides the screen problem I would not think its your CPU at all.

what's the problem then?
 
how is it connected to you computer, i imagine that might happen if you are using some type of analog to digital converter?? what videocard do you have?
 
spacedude89 said:
how is it connected to you computer, i imagine that might happen if you are using some type of analog to digital converter?? what videocard do you have?

It connected by a DVI cable, ATI Radeon 9600 Pro (256 mb)
 
what's the problem then?

As I said I have limited knowledge on LCDs but ghosting is a problem that many LCDs have. Yours is 8ms so I would think that it would be mostly ghost free. Have you done all suggestions so far? run the screen at native resolution as they like this best and are known to ghost at different resolutions. It could be a bad monitor I just don't know. hopefully someone else will post that has actual experience with LCDs as I've got none.
 
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