![]() I ordered it on Monday with Prime and it delivered on Friday as the wrong model! They sent out the right one two days later. I'd prefer to keep the monitor since there are no dead pixels (yet). I There is also a slight dimming of everything on the left and right sides versus the center area. The BLB is somewhat asymmetrical, which makes black on the right side great, and on the left not so good. However there is the oh so common back light bleed. I checked for bad pixels/subpixels using red, green, blue, black, white full screens. ![]() I don't know how well they honor their warranty, but it states that if there is a single dead/bright pixel they will replace the monitor within 3 years of purchase. I settled on an AOC monitor because of their warranty. I read reviews of monitors on Amazon (including the ones listed in this thread) and was scarred off because of the bad units and bad warranties. It's curved, which seems unnecessary at 27", but I don't mind much. Reviews and sites with reviews are all there to check.įinally got a monitor. Pick your poison, the bold ones could be in your budget. 32" IPS maybe in 2020, it's definitely better than 27" but they don't sell them in 100Hz+ monitors yet. I don't really check 1920x1080px = 2k monitors, those are long dead now for anything but pure budget <150 USD/EUR.įrom the 1440p 144Hz and 27" there are plenty to check but it's mostly all the same panel: AUO old and newer revisions, Innolux, LG for IPS and then Samsung for VA. Hard to say which one is worth buying especially at the bottom budget. In my signature are threads about monitors and lists of recent ones. You really should have better luck with the flat variant that they released much later. The curving along with other issues ruins those Samsung panels. Thanks.Ĭlick to expand.Yeah that's the junker, Samsung C27HG70, had 5 returned them all, other people had even 10 and never got an acceptable unit. I'm leaning towards Samsung but that monitor is $500. Update: From what I've read, all manufacturers have terrible customer support. They say they will replace a monitor with just one dark/bright pixel up to 3 or 4 years after purchase depending on model. Update: AOC offers the best dead pixel warranty. LG requires a minimum of 12 bright or dead pixels for a warranty claim. Black Dot Defect requires a minimum of 7 dots for warranty claim within the standard warranty period.īenQ requires 2 bright pixels or 5 dead pixels for warranty claim. Samsung Policy: Zero Bright Dot Defect policy is good only within first first 7 days after purchase. ![]() I also ad a bad experience with a MSI RMA but that was a long time ago. I've read bad things about MSI in regards to their warranty responses. MSI DOT Policy: (Bright Dot > 3 Dots, Bright dot gap =15mm) (Dark Dot > 5 Dots) I've narrowed down my choice to the following based on specs, without regard to the policies. I would consider buying an additional warranty against the defects. I'm looking for the best zero dead pixel policy. I've never seen a dead pixel on a reputable brand monitor, but the concept of having one seems ridiculous. I'm looking for a new monitor and I've noticed that the monitor market is a complete pile of crap right now.
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