[SOLVED] Ghosting 144hz monitor TN panel 1ms

Sep 18, 2019
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I've just bought a new monitor: Lenovo D24F-10 144hz 1ms, but the problem is he has 3 modes in settings( OFF, Normal and EXTREME) OFF means 5ms, Normal means 3ms and EXTREME means 1ms.. in Normal mode i have no ghosting but i have 3ms.. so i want to have it 1ms, i put it in EXTREME mode and i have ghosting on desktop and in game aswell.. how can i fix it?? oh i need to mentionate i use HDMI cable, native resolution on pc and 144 hz, it is normal to have ghosting? or i can do something to fix it? or i need to play on 3ms and it was a bad choose..?
 
Solution
The fact they have a configurable response time scares me; that means there's a tradeoff somewhere in order to achieve the desired result.
Lots of gaming monitors offer that. They use overdrive to increase the speed of pixel transitions, but if too much overdrive is used, you may see a lot of inaccurate pixel transitions between certain colors, often referred to as "inverse ghosting", since the monitor is overcompensating for ghosting.

The "fix" would generally be to turn down the overdrive setting to the normal mode. In general, I doubt you would notice a significant difference in the pixel response times.

Of course, another option might potentially be to return the screen and get another model. You should probably check...
The fact they have a configurable response time scares me; that means there's a tradeoff somewhere in order to achieve the desired result.
Lots of gaming monitors offer that. They use overdrive to increase the speed of pixel transitions, but if too much overdrive is used, you may see a lot of inaccurate pixel transitions between certain colors, often referred to as "inverse ghosting", since the monitor is overcompensating for ghosting.

The "fix" would generally be to turn down the overdrive setting to the normal mode. In general, I doubt you would notice a significant difference in the pixel response times.

Of course, another option might potentially be to return the screen and get another model. You should probably check professional reviews for more detailed information on things like pixel response times and input latency though, since there isn't exactly an industry standard way to measure a lot of these specifications.
 
Solution