G2410H - Nature’s Best Friend?

Thus far, the G2410H hasn’t really been able to shine - display performance isn’t bad, but it’s just average. Sure, it can hold its own among other more expensive contenders, but what about that green feeling you’re paying a $330 MSRP for? Thankfully, the G2410H really does impress when it comes to power draw.

We measure power consumption using a Kill-A-Watt EZ at the wall while just displaying the Windows desktop using minimum brightness and maximum brightness.



This blows away the other CCFL LCDs we have in our testbench. Clearly, Dell’s design decisions focused around really making this monitor a power sipper, and that it does. Our testing here verifies the power specifications given by Dell back on page one, besting the case with maximum brightness.

Now, what about that ambient light sensor?

Dell provides three different “Energy Modes,” which basically are scale factors the LCD uses to decide on a particular brightness. The LCD ships with the most economical of the three enabled, which is way too dim for my personal taste. There’s also a bar graph marked “Energy Gauge” which does a surprisingly good job of reporting power draw. Glancing back and forth between this and the Kill-A-Watt, it was apparent that there’s some real power monitoring circuitry at play here and not just a dumb brightness setting.

 
The bars change colors from green to yellow to red (where I sat most of the time, environmentally unfriendly person I am) as you crank up the brightness.
 

For these numbers, I measured the luminance of the room where I was testing (an average office with a number of full spectrum CFLs). I averaged about 22 nits of brightness using the i1D2.

Dell G2410H - Power Consumption
Energy Mode Brightness - White (nits) Brightness - Dark (nits) Power Draw (watts)
Energy Smart Plus 94 0.13 10
Energy Smart 108 0.14 12
Standard (manual) 259 0.32 20
Standard (maximum) 311 0.37 23
Standard (minimum) 78 0.09 10

Even in my relatively well-lit room, letting the ambient light sensor decide on a brightness results in luminance intensities at about our print (100 nits) standard. Quite honestly, this is way too dim for my taste, unless you happen to live in a cave or have hypersensitive eyes. For office work, the “Energy Smart” setting might be acceptable, but being uncomfortable and possibly straining your eyes isn’t worth the 8 watts of difference - just go unplug something else in the house and pay yourself with some well deserved photons. Keep in mind that if you do turn the lights off, the intensity is going to drop even more, and even with the lights off on the most conservative of settings, power use doesn’t drop below 10 watts.

No matter how you stack it, the Energy Smart Plus and Energy Smart settings seem very close to each other for meriting two different settings; a bit more range would be a welcome tweak.

 

Analysis - Brightness Uniformity G2410H - Wrap Up
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  • Calin - Friday, May 7, 2010 - link

    Nice review, and if you mention it, I remember the nice sounds the CRT made when starting, stopping and changing graphic modes.
    I'm looking forward to more articles from you
  • QueBert - Friday, May 7, 2010 - link

    That's what a REAL monitor does. My 22" Sony CRT will crush any LCD out there (literally) When I get on an LCD and turn it on to no sound I get pissed. When you turn a CRT on it lets you know it means business with the *BWHHH* it makes, and the click when you change resolutions is another thing missing from LCD.

    *HUGS his CRT* Nice and warm too :D
  • QueBert - Friday, May 7, 2010 - link

    That's what a REAL monitor does. My 22" Sony CRT will crush any LCD out there (literally) When I get on an LCD and turn it on to no sound I get pissed. When you turn a CRT on it lets you know it means business with the *BWHHH* it makes, and the click when you change resolutions is another thing missing from LCD.

    *HUGS his CRT* Nice and warm too :D
  • pjconoso - Friday, May 7, 2010 - link

    Now that is one manly comment right there!
  • niva - Monday, May 10, 2010 - link

    Right on, also real monitors (like a pair of 21" CRTs) give you sun tan. Only your closest friends will know that you never step outside of your house during the day.
  • Brian Klug - Friday, May 7, 2010 - link

    Thanks for the encouragement guys, I've got another monitor on my desk right now I'm working on as well, and the Spyder 3 just came in ;)

    There's a bunch more coming!

    -Brian
  • Soulkeeper - Friday, May 7, 2010 - link

    Still looking for an LCD that won't be a downgrade from 10yr old CRT technology.
    1920x1080 for a 24" display doesn't get me excited.
  • dieselJosh - Friday, May 7, 2010 - link

    For the price $339, one can acquire one or more flagship CRT units, such as the fw900 or a7217a.

    Any event horizon guesses for when flat panel displays will be able to compete with such CRTs performance for gaming?
  • Zingam - Friday, May 7, 2010 - link

    I have an older 22 inch version that looks the same. I love it. The only one thing that bothers me is the frame! Can't they make the screen and the frame flat. The frame with that shape collects so much dust it's unbelievable. That's not the problem - the problem is the cleaning then!
  • blueeyesm - Friday, May 7, 2010 - link

    The problem isn't it collects dust easily; it's that there's too much dust in that room.

    Run the vacuum more often.

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