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Acer P241WB

By Eric Franklin, CNET.com on 30 July 2008 12:02 PM

Tags: acer, monitor, p241wb, 24-inch, review, dvi, display, bezel

High brightness and a low price make the 24-inch Acer P241w immediately appealing, as does its unique bezel design, but we found its brightness came at the expense of deep colours and blacks.

Design
The 24-inch Acer P241w may look plain at first glance, but it has some subtle details that reveal a thoughtful design. The glossy, black bezel is conventionally flat along the top of the display, and the left and right sides of the bezel slope toward the back. The bottom edge of the bezel slopes downward and out toward the user before flattening out and then sharply sloping toward the back. From the bottom corners of the display, the bezel subtly dips downward toward the middle to create a kind of "nose" right in the bottom centre, with the silver Acer logo located right above it. With each side of the bezel having a different design, a unique and sleek look is created for the display.

The bezel measures 20mm at the top by 23mm on the side and the bottom section is 38mm at its longest point. The top and sides are about average bezel size, but the bottom is a lot longer than what we're used to seeing, thanks to it dipping toward the centre.

The foot stand has a grey matte finish and looks to be shaped like a giant "A" with the neck acting as the cross in the middle. The stand is about 368mm wide and about 208mm deep at its longest points, which creates a fairly stable base that does wobble a bit when knocked from the front or back, but not when knocked from the side.

The onscreen display controls are located near the lower right-hand corner of the display and include five buttons; a left and a right arrow, a Menu button, and an Auto button. There is also the "e" button that lets you select from four preset settings; Text, Standard, Graphics, and Movie. Each setting changes the black level (brightness) to be appropriate the activity. The OSD navigation is cumbersome with the Menu button doubling as the "enter" button, which can get confusing. However, we like that you can configure how long the OSD stays onscreen — up to 120 seconds — so you don't have to keep navigating back to whatever setting you were trying to tweak when it disappears after 10 seconds. The power button, which sits to the right of the OSD controls, has a cool blue LED in front of it that stays on as long as the display is on.

The back of the display has a plain black matte finish. The HDMI port is a bit too close to the neck of the display, making it difficult to get to and not as easy as it is with the BenQ V2400W. The display tilts back about 20 degrees but it does not rotate. Nor does it adjust in height. The display features a matte screen that we prefer over the glossy alternative as that type can get very reflective at times and is more easily smudged.

Features
The three connections that are fast becoming the standard for displays of this size are VGA, DVI, and HDMI, and the Acer P241w includes them all. Acer only includes cables for DVI and VGA, however. Those connections will fit most user's needs, but if you are interested in more options, like composite, component, or DisplayPort connections we recommend you check out the Dell UltraSharp 2408WFP.

The display includes the standard 1,920x1,200 resolution for 24-inch screens. As far as additional features, that's pretty much it — no headphone jack, USB ports or card reader here.

Performance
In CNET Labs testing, we connected the Acer P241w via DVI and were impressed with a very high 1,074:1 contrast ratio. By comparison, the V7 D24W33 and the BenQ V2400W achieved 670:1 and 996:1, respectively, on the same test. While impressive in its own right, we attribute the Acer's high contrast ratio in large part to its very high brightness that came in at 465cd/m sqaured. After setting the display up to test the contrast ratio, we measured the blacks and whites and found that although the blacks were only coming in at about 0.38 squared on average, the whites were still very high, creating a large span between the darkest blacks and the brightest white as per our test setup. The V7 D24W33 and the BenQ V2400W scored 190 and 218, respectively in the brightness test. The Acer's 465 is the highest brightness score we've yet recorded — only the Dell UltraSharp 2408WFP comes close with a 452 brightness score. In our overall DisplayMate-based tests the Acer P241w got a composite score of 87, which came close to matching the 90 achieved by the V7 and the 89 of the BenQ.

There were just a couple areas where the Acer P241w struggled. For one, the display did not produce colour as vividly as the other displays, and as a result there was no real pop to them. We tried tweaking the manual colour settings but could not get the colours to show much depth without over saturating them. Also, the backlight seems set too high for the display. Even when turned down to 0, the image on screen still looked too bright as long as the contrast was at a reasonable level. We found it very difficult to get the Acer to display deeps blacks as the image just looked dim when we turned the white and black levels down.

We looked at King Kong on DVD and found the image to be sharp, but it still lacked the colour oomph we would have liked to have seen. Kong's facial details were easy to make out though. Testing note: We noticed that a number of users have been experiencing problems with the Acer P241w. It seems that some are having trouble getting it to display a picture at times. In our time with the display (two weeks) we did not experience such problems.

Brightness (in cd/m squared)
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Acer P241w 24-inch
465 
Dell 2408 WFP-HC 24-inch
452 
Gateway FHD2400 24-inch
412 
BenQ V2400W 24-inch
218 
V7 D24W33 24-inch
190 

Contrast ratio
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
Acer P241w 24-inch
1,065:1 
Gateway FHD2400 24-inch
1,047:1 
BenQ V2400W 24-inch
996:1 
Dell 2408 WFP-HC 24-inch
891:1 
V7 D24W33 24-inch
670:1 

DisplayMate performance
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
V7 D24W33 24-inch
90 
Dell 2408 WFP-HC 24-inch
90 
BenQ V2400W 24-inch
89 
Acer P241w 24-inch
87 
Gateway FHD2400 24-inch
75 
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Overview

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The good:
  • Unique bezel design creates an aesthetically pleasing look
  • Sharp picture quality with DVDs and games
  • Very high screen brightness
  • DVI, VGA and HDMI ports
The bad:
  • High brightness makes for washed out colour and shallow blacks
  • No height adjustment or rotation feature
  • OSD menu navigation takes some getting used to
The bottomline:

High brightness and a low price make the 24-inch Acer P241w immediately appealing, as does its unique bezel design, but we found its brightness came at the expense of deep colours and blacks.

Editors’ rating:

6.8/10

RRP: AU$599.00

Related topics:

acer, monitor, P241WB, 24-inch, review, dvi

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