gateway fpd1760 tft lcd drivers manufacturer
GATEWAY TFT1780PS FPD1760 17" FLAT PANEL TFT LCD MONITOR DVI/VGA. No power cord. Comes with the computer cord. Has wear from use. Powers up fine. Don"t Forget to Follow on Instagram NevermoreSales See photos as they are an important part of the description and will help you know what you are bidding on. I do not accept returns. I do my best to describe all items but Sometimes I miss things so the photos are important. . Please Please ask questions. Thanks for bidding and good luck. Check out all my items for some great finds. Lots of cool stuff at my auctions. I can combine shipping on most.
Condition: Used, Condition: Powers up. Has some wear from use and storage. Some scratches to the screen., Display Type: TFT, Brand: Gateway, Screen Size: 17
It"s not a head-turner, but the Gateway FPD1960"s streamlined, classic design aims to please the masses. The panel features an inch-wide, matte-silver bezel, with contrasting glossy black sides. The rounded corners give the FPD1960 a softer appearance. The small but stable circular base supports a thin, matte-black plastic neck.
The height isn"t adjustable; the FPD1960"s panel is permanently suspended 4 inches above your desk, which is a good height for most people but a little low for taller folks. The panel tilts back 35 degrees but doesn"t offer near the adjustability of other monitors we"ve seen. Gateway sells a $50 replacement stand, however, that swivels and telescopes. (It also pivots from Landscape to Portrait mode, but the FPD1960 can"t pivot the image to match.) Two plastic squeeze tabs hold the panel to the neck, so you can swap stands without tools.
Setting up and using the Gateway FPD1960 is quite simple. The power button stands alone on the front bezel, while the other five buttons are hidden on the panel"s right side. Although out of sight, they"re well labeled and easy to reach. If you press the menu button, the onscreen menu (OSM) pops up; a sidebar with arrows labeling the functions of the buttons, much like what you"d find on an ATM, helps you navigate the menu. The OSM lets you adjust the display"s more advanced settings, such as color temperature and gamma, but brightness and contrast have their own dedicated buttons on the side.
The FPD1960"s 1,280x1,024 native resolution with a 19-inch (diagonal) field produces 85 dots per inch--a comfortable density for reading even if you sit back from your desk. But the contrast wasn"t as crisp as we"re used to seeing from LCDs; black text on white background didn"t pop on our tests. The monitor produced fairly saturated colors, making graphics acceptable to look at, but on CNET"s DisplayMate-based tests, we noticed that the panel introduced inappropriate tints at different saturation levels, which can create some color distortion in photos and movies.
Our DVD-playback test showed some streaking or ghosting, which was no surprise considering the panel"s relatively slow 16-millisecond pixel-response time. Problems with screen uniformity are common among LCDs, and the FPD1960 is no exception; our test unit was darker along the top edge of the screen than elsewhere. It also scored fairly low on our brightness tests--despite its more impressive factory specs. We found the screen bright enough to use under standard office-type fluorescent lights, but in a sunlit room, the picture may appear dim.
Gateway skimps on support. Most LCDs have a three-year warranty, but Gateway covers only one year unless you pay an extra $30 to extend it to three. You also have to pay shipping for repairs. Gateway runs a tech-support call center 24/7 on a toll-free line, and you can e-mail questions or chat online with a representative via its support Web site.
So I"ve been trying to set up my triple monitors since I recently upgraded my old graphics card, Nvidia GT 640, to a PCS+ Radeon R9 390. Thing is, all three monitors worked fine with that old card. This new one on the other hand, doesn"t seem to be picking up one of the monitors. The main monitor I use is connected via HDMI to the graphics card. Second one is actually a TV, connected HDMI to the onboard graphics of the motherboard. The main change is the third monitor, which is a Gateway FPD1760 TFT LCD Color Monitor that is now connected via DVI-D to the graphics card, before this was connected through a VGA -> VGA Converter DVI-I -> Graphics Card, and it worked perfectly fine. The monitor signal is picked up during BIOS startup, since it replicates the image on the main monitor, but right after BIOS, signal is gone, says "No signal," and then the power button goes from blue to a yellow-orange color. Any help is highly appreciated!
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