posted on Nov, 11 2010 @ 08:19 PM
i - do you see the dot on the i? of course you do... and it is only ONE pixel. Imagine the dot being red and on a black background.
I have a 23 inch ASUS monitor that I bought from newegg, and it has ONE stuck pixel on red. I can't notice it on white, but on darker colored back
grounds it sticks out like a sore thumb. If you want to see exactly what it looks like, then load up MSPAINT and make the background black, then pick
the red color and just click one time on the background with the pencil tool. Add a slight blooming effect for the light that seeps into the
surrounding pixels a bit.
This is what I wrote to newegg:
I recently purchased an Asus VH235T-P monitor and it has a red pixel that bleeds through to other pixels (maybe it's actually a block of 4 red
pixels)... I can't tell. Anyway, it's absolutely horrible to look at and ruins movies and anything with a dark colored background. It goes away
sometimes, but constantly comes back. I am greatly displeased at the state of the monitor and would like to do an exchange. Can you please advice me
on the process that I should go through to do this? Thank you for your time.
So they respond that an RMA has been issued, and I have a shipping label ready to print. Under the newegg comment section, it says:
monitor has a red pixel that bleeds through to other pixels
It also says this for the RMA details:
ASUS VH235T-P Black 23" 5ms Widescreen Full HD 1080p LCD Monitor Built-in Speaders
Qty:1
RMA Type: Replacement
Reason: Not specified
Is there anything odd about this? Jesus, it doesn't really BLEED, I was just using that as an analogy. Do they think it's leaking liquid crystal? I
thought it may have been 4 pixels when I was writing that, but it appears that it is really one that glares into the pixels around it.
Then the reason is NOT SPECIFIED????
Anyway, it goes away if I rub the screen with a cloth, and then comes back maybe an hour later when i have to rub it again. I was contemplating just
keeping it and hoping it goes away permanently, but this rubbing could inadvertently damage other areas of the screen.
Please provide input for my brain to form an idea based on multiple perspectives.
edit on 11-11-2010 by RestingInPieces because: (no reason
given)