Viewsonic VG2428wm

Currently available for about $270 online, the VG2428wm is a scream­ing deal if you want a top-end, 24-inch LCD but not the top-shelf price tag that's often attached to such displays. The VG2428wm supports VGA and DVI-D ports but not HDMI. Instead, you get a two-port USB 2.0 hub and a 3.5mm stereo that feeds the 2W integrated stereo speakers. The speakers are sufficient for voice and YouTube, but you wouldn't want to game with them.

Using X-Rite's ilDisplay2 package, we measured the VG2428wm out of the box with a 2.2 gamma, an already optimal 6500K color temperature, a minimum luminance of 0.3cd/m2, and a running luminance (at 100%) brightness of 329cd/m2-a respectable 10% above the vendor's specification. We observed only slight blooming around the bottom edge and nothing out of the ordinary for a mainstream CCFL unit.

We've heard from Viewsonic that the compa­ny is transitioning to LED backlighting across its product line, and we can see why. Despite excellent color quality (that admittedly favors reds a bit over blues before calibration), deep blacks, zero visible ghosting, and excellent ability to preserve bright color grades without banding, the only weak­ness in this model is its power consump­tion. With a solid black background on the Windows 7 desktop, we measured the VG2428wm drawing 38.4W A solid white background yielded 37.3W. 

Withthe default Win7 desktop, we meas­ured 37.9W at 100% brightness, 27W at 80%, and 22.5W at 50%, with full-screen video maxing out at 41.2W LED panels generally con­sume much less. However, Viewsonic's stand is bril­liant, allowing for a 90-degree pivot, 360-degree swiveling, almost effortless tilting from - 5 to 20 degrees, and a height adjustment spanning 5.3 inches, so you can be ergonomically comfort­able. The 0.75-inch bezel isn't remark­ably thin, but it's svelte enough to escape much notice. Overall, the VG2428wm is one of the best monitor values we've tested recently .

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