First post, by TheAbandonwareGuy
- Rank
- Oldbie
I recently acquired some new CRT monitors after a little bit of walking around town and checking some small-town thrift stores. Anywho after testing these monitors, and thinking of my previous experiences with CRTs. I got to thinking: What makes a CRT good?
Anywho, I'm going to describe 5 CRTs and my opinions of them. 3 which I've had for a while and or owned at one point and 2 which I got in town a couple of days ago.
The first (and the CRT I used the most) was a "KFC" brand monitor according to what my PC reported the model as. I'm pretty sure based on that and the red/pink + white color scheme that it came from the KFC resteraunt adjacent to the thrift store I purchased it at. It was a 17" model capable of 1280x1024 @ 80HZ manufactured in late 1997. It was hooked up to my main PC as a secondary monitor for 2 years and mostly used for emulation and arcade games. The problem with the monitor was it had absolutely no brightness at all no matter what settings it was ran at. The black levels were basically non-existent and this made playing anything that wasn't globally lit basically impossible. It also liked to shift to pink shading on one corner on occasion. The monitor died after 2 years of relatively heavy usage. The 2nd worst CRT I've ever had.
The second monitor was a no-name 17" model which ran 1280x1024 @ 60HZ manufactured in 1999 which I found in an abandoned mobile home. The problem was everything was illegibly blurry at any resolution or setting.
I'm not sure if this was just the worst Chinese knockoff monitor ever or if something was damaged. Easily and byfar the worst CRT I've ever had.
Third we have an AST Research VGA monitor. It was manufactured in 1989, measures 12"s and was capable of no-more than 640x480 @ 60HZ. It's the only CRT I've had this far that had hardware controls for positioning, brightness, gamma, etc. It had issues with black levels but I think they were within reason for the time frame it existed in. Color quality was also rather meh for a CRT. Worse than the 2 monitors above this even. That being said it worked and for its time I suppose it was good but I wouldn't really see myself using it day to day with my retro machines (not even with the AST 486 it originally came with which I do own).
The fourth is a Compaq S5500 manufactured in 2001. It's a 15" model capable of 1024x768 @ 75hz. Out of my CRTs it's the newest and in my opinion has the finest color reproduction albeit lacking somewhat in brightness and resolution. Overall it's a average CRT. No major strengths, no major weakness's but still far from my favorite monitor (below).
Next we have the Gateway2000 CrystalScan YE07111 manufactured February of 1997. It's a 17" model capable of 1280x1024 @ 80HZ and in my opinion is an excellent monitor. By far my favorite CRT and the only CRT I have found so far which I prefer over my 17" Dell Ultrasharp LCD from 2006. It's color reproduction is absolutely fantastic and it's the only CRT I've had so far which doesn't have issues displaying different black levels in a manor that allows one to play games such as Rainbow Six and Fallout while seeing the various details in darker areas. It also has a very nice knob based on screen display based setup system that is a breeze to navigate. The YE07111 also has excellent brightness albeit it's best viewed at 90 percent brightness during gaming or 80 percent while large amounts of black are on-screen (otherwise it does appear gray instead of black). It's really fantastic for retro gaming.
After all this, it really shows just how different similar looking CRTs can be. What makes a CRT good in your mind?
RetroEra: Retro Gaming Podcast and Community: https://discord.gg/kezaTvzH3Q
Cyb3rst0rm's Retro Hardware Warzone: https://discord.gg/naTwhZVMay
I used to own over 160 graphics card, I've since recovered from graphics card addiction