NOTE: ONLY units marked as REV A00 will work. JesperG: 06/6-2021, I found one from February 2005, it deos not work with native Amiga systems. PD: Jul-02-2019 I purchased a model made in April 2005 but it will not work with PAL Amiga 1200 with RGB > VGA cable. Interlaced modes flicker badly with RGB but look great with S-Video. Units manufactured until June 2005 work, those September 2005 and later don't. ( specs)ĭoesn't remember screen position. Manufacturer has 15kHz on VGA mentioned in data sheet, but needs testing. Tested with Escom Amiga A1200, works well ( specs) Certain video modes allows for aspect ratio correction is correctable).
Monitor correctly reports input resolution. If certain video mode is applied then aspect ratio correction is not possible, but "it is so beautiful, that it even isn't needed" (as in a shrapness manner) when happens so. Laced also works with classic Laced flickering. Model ID: GW2480-B, Type: GW2480E, Rev.: 10-130-BL, P/N: 9H.LHELB.CBE, Tested on Amiga, All video modes working including ECS and AGA modes. Uncorrectable aspect ratio, interlaced mode flickers too much. Martin Brierley reports that PAL mode isn't supported on this monitorĭoes not do 15khz. Tested in AtariST + VGA Low Resolution Adapter. Very nice screen.īeetronics has confirmed that this monitor supports 15kHz via VGA No, it dosen't work at all at 15Hz. flickers)Ī600 and A1200 ok : tested in PAL,NTSC,Euro72,Multiscan, interlaced work but its flickering.
DELL 1905FP MONITOR SPECS FULL
Also available as 22" (22T1EH) and 27" (27T1EH).Ī500 with full Overscan, both non-/interlaced works (but i. Does not support 15kHz over VGA, but supports over SCART, S-Video and Composite. HDMI, VGA, SCART, S-Video, Component, Composite, Tuner module "Works well on an Amiga A500 with a passive VGA adapter. There is an option to display in proper aspect ratio but it didn't seem to make much difference" All screen display fully, no pixels cut off or anything. So will not work with Amiga, Atari computer." "I've been looking for a modern LCD that can handle the 15KHz modes that my old Amiga 500 outputs natively - this monitor works perfectly! May also work with older Atari ST and retrocomputers from similar eras." ( specs) "Nice monitor but new version is not 15khz. Also can't take out of 16:9 mode." ( specs) "works, but pixels are uneven and pretty ugly. Tested variant was most likely Acer P215H Bbd. Clock and phase timings will not resolve moire on a checkerboard pattern."
"Does not honour aspect ratio for 4:3 / 5:4 sources. "Couldn't find a way to set aspect ratio and couldn't eliminate vertical timing bands completely. Just use a RGB to VGA adapter and it works VERY well. "This is the nicest LCD I have ever seen on Amiga. Works great on an Atari ST at Low and Medium color resolutions.
Doesn't correct Aspect Ratio, but otherwise looks surprisingly nice. "Syncs to NTSC, PAL, and Interlace/Double NTSC. "Partial" support deficiencies should be noted in the comments. If the user needs to manually center or stretch the image, the settings persist across screen mode changes and power cycles.The monitor supports 240p/288p and 480i/576i and is usable in these modes without annoying flicker, at least not more annoying than a CRT's flicker.This means black or grey bars at the top and bottom (but not sides) of a 5:4 monitor and on the sides (but not top or bottom) of a 16:9 or 16:10 monitor. The monitor is able to display the image centered and in the proper aspect ratio (4:3), shows every pixel of the source signal, and doesn't waste screen space.Only unpowered adapters are allowed for "full" support. The monitor requires no external scan doubler (such as an XRGB-mini or OSSC) or other powered devices to correctly process analog 15 kHz signals through the RGB connector."Full" 15 kHz RGB Support in the table below means it supports 15kHz signals at least as well as a CRT: (Note that Component video is actually YPrPb.) A list of modern flat panel (LCD, OLED) monitors that directly support analog 15 kHz signals through discrete RGB connectors (VGA, DVI-A, and/or SCART).