Hey everyone
I'm interested in finding out the rising and falling times of several notebook displays. Unfortunately the specs of all the notebooks I've seen do not provide this information (often not even the response time). My internet research has yet been unsuccessful as well. I would therefore truly appreciate if somone could give me a hint of how I can figure out the rising and falling times of notebook displays (Dell, Hp, Lenovo etc.)
Marcel
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If you do a google search of the model number of your screen, if you are lucky you might be able to come across the datasheet/product specification of your laptop's screen.
e.g. I googled the model no B131HW02 and was lucky enough to find the typical response time 16ms (3 rising, 13 falling) for my laptop's screen in a PDF on the internet.
If you are needing to look up a lot of models, it won't be easy. What basically are you trying to gather this information for?
edit:
@yknyong1 ¯\(°_o)/¯ -
I am curious: What do rising times and falling times exactly mean?
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hey! I'd like to do research that demands a very strict control of presentation times. Any ghosting is thus to be prevented. I'll contact the main notebook companies and ask for the specs!
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Thanks a lot for this useful link Indrek! I appreciate!
Rising + Falling times in notebook displays
Discussion in 'Hardware Components and Aftermarket Upgrades' started by Buckeye17, Feb 16, 2012.