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geekhack Community => Off Topic => Topic started by: tp4tissue on Sat, 20 November 2021, 22:28:46

Title: Active kewl monitor.
Post by: tp4tissue on Sat, 20 November 2021, 22:28:46
Added a fan to my monitor, the contrast ratio is higher.

Went from 6500:1 to 6833:1

That's not HUGE,  but I can't think of why....

Is it just that the measurement is more stable across time ?


Thoughts?

(https://i.imgur.com/hVaXskJ.gif)
Title: Re: Active kewl monitor.
Post by: pixelpusher on Sat, 20 November 2021, 22:38:40
maybe water cool it and see if you can push it further  :p
Title: Re: Active kewl monitor.
Post by: tp4tissue on Sat, 20 November 2021, 22:41:04
maybe water cool it and see if you can push it further  :p

Thought about it,  but with most displays I'd have to cut into the bezel.

They also don't generate enough heat to warrant water, because the dissipation area is pretty large vs wattage.

I feel like the calibration is tighter with the active kewl. 


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Title: Re: Active kewl monitor.
Post by: suicidal_orange on Sun, 21 November 2021, 02:28:27
Electronics work better when cooled, that's why we cool them.  Without knowing what tech this monitor is (and actually as I'm not an EE that still wouldn't help me...) or your method of testing (turn on, leave for 30 mins to stabilise, test, turn off for an hour and repeat with cooling at a constant ambient temperature would be best) it's impossible to say why but I'm not surprised.

5% is a nice improvement as long as your solution isn't loud and/or ugly if either would be a problem :)
Title: Re: Active kewl monitor.
Post by: yui on Tue, 23 November 2021, 02:21:25
on LCD the light that is not used is disipated as heat, so the cooler your monitor the most light it can absorb, so can reach higher luminosity or lower darks, so higher contrasts, i do not think it would work on low end monitors/tvs but i have seen a few videos complaining about contrast being higher when just started up.
for oled i guess the same idea applies, the more light you want out the more heat those LEDs output, so if you do not want to kill them you may need to lower the overall brightness with heat, so reducing the contrast.
both are only guesses on my part though