Hi all...
I'm looking at possibly getting an LCD / LED computer display maybe in the next few months. (I'm currently sharing my computer with my mom, and she's wanting to get her own soon. She'll be keeping the display as it's hers anyway.)
I'll probably ask in more detail (advice on specific specs, like contrast ratio, brightness, etc) on a more computer-oriented site, but basically I'm probably looking at something between 20 and 24 inches, 1920x1080 minimum resolution, decent for gaming, watching movies, etc, preferably under $200, or not much over.
A main reason I'm asking about it on here is related to RFI on broadcast bands. The CRT we're currently using puts out some nasty RFI on several frequencies, and raises the noise floor throughout the AM band. At its current setting, for example, a local station on 600 kHz (5 kW at 8 miles, fair to good ground conductivity per M3, something like 40 to 70 mV/m per v-soft zip signal) is nearly inaudible with my portable radio sitting on the keyboard tray or on my lap. (Changing the resolution or refresh rate changes the frequencies that have extra-strong RFI.)
What do I need to look for in an LCD monitor to help eliminate the RFI while it's operating? I would like to be able to set my battery-operated AM radio (Tecsun PL-606 or Sony SRF-59 being the most likely ones at this time) on the desk, keyboard tray, wherever, without the display degrading reception of weak (for example 25 to 100 µV/m) signals. (Setting the radio on the computer tower also degrades reception, but not nearly to the levels or at the distances that the current CRT does.) If I could actually DX (e.g. have near-armchair level on a mid power level (5 kW), middle-of-band (1100 kHz) signal over average (8 mS/m) ground from 200-300 miles away, using the radio's built-in ferrite loopstick (not taking into account blocking/desense/splatter caused by nearby locals)) while my radio is actually TOUCHING the operating display, that'd be nice, but if not, what's the next best I could hope for?
I may mail-order a display, but I do plan to go to a few local stores and look at them in person before I decide which one to buy. Should I take an AM radio in there, even though reception (especially in a building like Fry's) will be virtually nil as my local Fry's doesn't have a 50kW with its very efficient (at least 511.77 mV/m @ 1 km for 1 kW applied power - figures pulled from KSTP data) stick rising up from inside the store, and check for RFI on the displays? (Assuming that I'm unable to receive any locals, maybe I should take a 2nd radio whose local oscillator I could tune for?)
TY & 73
I'm looking at possibly getting an LCD / LED computer display maybe in the next few months. (I'm currently sharing my computer with my mom, and she's wanting to get her own soon. She'll be keeping the display as it's hers anyway.)
I'll probably ask in more detail (advice on specific specs, like contrast ratio, brightness, etc) on a more computer-oriented site, but basically I'm probably looking at something between 20 and 24 inches, 1920x1080 minimum resolution, decent for gaming, watching movies, etc, preferably under $200, or not much over.
A main reason I'm asking about it on here is related to RFI on broadcast bands. The CRT we're currently using puts out some nasty RFI on several frequencies, and raises the noise floor throughout the AM band. At its current setting, for example, a local station on 600 kHz (5 kW at 8 miles, fair to good ground conductivity per M3, something like 40 to 70 mV/m per v-soft zip signal) is nearly inaudible with my portable radio sitting on the keyboard tray or on my lap. (Changing the resolution or refresh rate changes the frequencies that have extra-strong RFI.)
What do I need to look for in an LCD monitor to help eliminate the RFI while it's operating? I would like to be able to set my battery-operated AM radio (Tecsun PL-606 or Sony SRF-59 being the most likely ones at this time) on the desk, keyboard tray, wherever, without the display degrading reception of weak (for example 25 to 100 µV/m) signals. (Setting the radio on the computer tower also degrades reception, but not nearly to the levels or at the distances that the current CRT does.) If I could actually DX (e.g. have near-armchair level on a mid power level (5 kW), middle-of-band (1100 kHz) signal over average (8 mS/m) ground from 200-300 miles away, using the radio's built-in ferrite loopstick (not taking into account blocking/desense/splatter caused by nearby locals)) while my radio is actually TOUCHING the operating display, that'd be nice, but if not, what's the next best I could hope for?
I may mail-order a display, but I do plan to go to a few local stores and look at them in person before I decide which one to buy. Should I take an AM radio in there, even though reception (especially in a building like Fry's) will be virtually nil as my local Fry's doesn't have a 50kW with its very efficient (at least 511.77 mV/m @ 1 km for 1 kW applied power - figures pulled from KSTP data) stick rising up from inside the store, and check for RFI on the displays? (Assuming that I'm unable to receive any locals, maybe I should take a 2nd radio whose local oscillator I could tune for?)
TY & 73