Is it worth paying for a pixel perfect monitor? I can't find a reasonably priced, tempered glass and pixel perfect monitor.
From what I am reading is either that pixel perfect policy changed or there is now a clarification... it guarantees no more than 5 dead/bright pixels... they say someone checks it before shipping, but some people still get defective pixels and some sellers partial refund per dead pixel...
your probability is still the same with non-pixel perfect... Good Luck!
The monitor I got had a "Korean" style plug. I just replaced the power cord with a regular American style plug and everything worked fine.
I have a Catleap Q270 LED and it seems perfect as well.
From what I am reading is either that pixel perfect policy changed or there is now a clarification... it guarantees no more than 5 dead/bright pixels... they say someone checks it before shipping, but some people still get defective pixels and some sellers partial refund per dead pixel...
your probability is still the same with non-pixel perfect... Good Luck!
The monitor I got had a "Korean" style plug. I just replaced the power cord with a regular American style plug and everything worked fine.
I have a Catleap Q270 LED and it seems perfect as well.
Ok, after looking at 1080p and 1200p monitors, I decided to get a Catleap.
27", IPS and 1440p are huge upgrades over LCD 1080p's yet in same price range, simply too irresistible. I have a Sapphire 5770 that is listed as "not supported" on some ebay sites. It has 2 DVI outputs and I'm getting contradictory answers whether this GPU will work with a catleap. I'm aware that the 5770 is inadequate for anything GPU intensive at 1440p (actually that applies at 1080p as well) but after buying a monitor, I need to hang onto the GPU just a little longer until bank account bounces back enough to spring for a 7870 or 7970.
Which models would you guys recommend, ebay sellers/sites to purchase from, things to look out for and what else should I know? TIA.
One would imagine that IF a 220V power brick was certified for 110V, it would have the info hard printed on the cover."so when i should get it, i should immediately throw out the power cord that comes with it, and just use a regular power cable that you would normally plug into the back of a pc or monitor?"
In my case, the power brick has a sticker (added on) that says: AC 110 is acceptable. I don't know if other people are using the same approach.
I have seen many reports of this card working well with the monitor, but remember that only one DVI output of the two is Dual Link. This is the one you need to use.Ok, after looking at 1080p and 1200p monitors, I decided to get a Catleap.
27", IPS and 1440p are huge upgrades over LCD 1080p's yet in same price range, simply too irresistible. I have a Sapphire 5770 that is listed as "not supported" on some ebay sites. It has 2 DVI outputs and I'm getting contradictory answers whether this GPU will work with a catleap. I'm aware that the 5770 is inadequate for anything GPU intensive at 1440p (actually that applies at 1080p as well) but after buying a monitor, I need to hang onto the GPU just a little longer until bank account bounces back enough to spring for a 7870 or 7970.
Which models would you guys recommend, ebay sellers/sites to purchase from, things to look out for and what else should I know? TIA.