Установить Steam
войти
|
язык
简体中文 (упрощенный китайский)
繁體中文 (традиционный китайский)
日本語 (японский)
한국어 (корейский)
ไทย (тайский)
Български (болгарский)
Čeština (чешский)
Dansk (датский)
Deutsch (немецкий)
English (английский)
Español - España (испанский)
Español - Latinoamérica (латиноам. испанский)
Ελληνικά (греческий)
Français (французский)
Italiano (итальянский)
Bahasa Indonesia (индонезийский)
Magyar (венгерский)
Nederlands (нидерландский)
Norsk (норвежский)
Polski (польский)
Português (португальский)
Português-Brasil (бразильский португальский)
Română (румынский)
Suomi (финский)
Svenska (шведский)
Türkçe (турецкий)
Tiếng Việt (вьетнамский)
Українська (украинский)
Сообщить о проблеме с переводом
its uncommon for dead pixels in displays for about the last 10 years
to here and full screen, dead sub pixel will be different color
https://lcdtech.info/en/tests/dead.pixel.htm
if its evenly darker than its something blocking light from behind the panel
nope, most monitors are not horribly hard to take apart tho
were those areas dimmer when you got it?
or it might be mold
they cant get black spots like that from bugs
mold would be about the only cause for it to do that
That's what your spots look like to me.
There is also the potential that something damaged the polarizers in those two gaps in the pixel array. I'd actually lean more toward this given the display is a TN panel
where you get bright streaks and dark areas
back lit tvs are easy to take apart to clean
20+ years ago dlp and the huge rear projections were prone to spiders and bugs blocking light
and a few of those that used liquid cooling for the lighting would grow algae and turn a green tint
If those blips were dead pixels they would be 100% black and zero light on that pixel dot
Take the panel apart and have all dust blown out.