And here we are, finally with the new CRT, the RDD can finally be "retro" once again.

The new monitor is an Olivetti CDU 1458MS/HA71 from 1993, and back then it was one of the high end monitors made by the italian company. It was a quite advanced monitor for its time, since it featured 19 memory states, 9 set at the factory and 10 that were user programmable, allowing the user to adjust and store picture size and position parameters per resolution. Indeed, the monitor automatically adjusts the picture if its settings are stored in memory, kinda like a modern LCD monitor when adjusts itself, that is pretty cool to watch. It also has a seven segments green LED display that shows the memory state the monitor is using at the moment.

To add some extra flair to the monitor, it was entirely made in Italy, by Hantarex in Florence, and it seems that everything I heard about the top notch quality of their CRTs is true: the picture is razor sharp, Trinitron like I'd say, and the colour fidelity is spot on. I have never seen such a sharp 14" CRT before, so I suspect that the dot pitch might be 0.27 or even 0.26mm, as not even the previous Trust monitor I had, that featured a 0.28mm dot pitch, was as sharp as this Olivetti. As a nice bonus, it also supports 1024x768 at 60Hz and 70Hz without the text looking fuzzy, unlike other monitors of the time.

Overall, what to say? It's been definitely a good purchase. This monitor was fully loaded for its times, and came with several features that we take for granted nowadays, but back in the early 90s they were considered features for high end monitors, and Olivetti computers had a reputation for being quality products. The only drawback is that this monitor, just like the Trust I had previously, likes to whine often, and since I'm still young to hear the high pitched squeal of CRT monitors, it makes me crazy, but I'm going to live with it: maybe the situation will get better with time, since the Trust stopped doing that after a month of usage so I'm confident the Olivetti will do the same thing, as it takes time for capacitors and other components to re-energize.
Shall I recommend this monitor to other people? Sure, why not. You'd get a 14" with an excellent colour fidelity, almost Trinitron-esque sharpness, digital control for size, pincushion and position, 10 user programmable memory states to store parameters for custom resolutions, a green LED display that shows the memory state in use at the moment, and an overall 1980s design that makes this Olivetti one of the best 14" monitors I ever tried on the RDD so far.
My Retro Daily Driver: Pentium !!!-S 1.7GHz | 3GB PC166 ECC SDRAM | Geforce 6800 Ultra 256MB | 128GB Lite-On SSD + 500GB WD Blue SSD | ESS Allegro PCI | Windows XP Professional SP3