Some might call it old-fashioned, but this is a decent monitor at a sensible price.
Written By
Published on 19 December 2010
To help us provide you with free impartial advice, we may earn a commission if you buy through links on our site. Learn more
recommended
1 / 3
Our rating
Reviewed price £107 inc VAT
You’ve probably never heard of Topview before, since it’s a relatively new company. It’s part of Gigazone, the parent company of Gigabyte, and judging by the quality of the A2281Wd+, it knows a thing or two about making LCD displays.
There’s been a lot of hype surrounding LED-backlit displays over the last 12 months, but good-quality examples are few and far between. The A2281Wd+ shuns LEDs and has a traditional CCFL backlight. It also eschews Full HD for a resolution of 1,680×1,050 (a 16:10 aspect ratio) and lacks an HDMI input. You could argue that the A2281Wd+ is outdated, and technically you’d be right, but there’s still a lot to like. Image quality is surprisingly good for a TN LCD panel (this is the most common type, especially at the budget end). Colours are vibrant without being garish, viewing angles are wide and contrast is better than many LED monitors we’ve seen. Subtly different shades of colours are easily distinguishable from one another, plus whites are very bright and blacks are more than dark enough for the price. When watching videos or playing fast-paces games, we saw no noticeable smearing or blurring, which makes the 5ms claimed response time believable.
The only criticisms concern the backlight, which isn’t perfectly even: there was a slightly dark patch on the right-hand side of our review model. A small amount of backlight bleed is visible along the top and bottom edges, although this is noticeable when showing black bars above a widescreen movie.
It isn’t too surprising to find a tilt-only stand and no speakers at this price, but while there’s no HDMI, you get VGA and DVI-D inputs. The latter is HDCP compliant, so you can still connect HDMI devices with an adaptor. The one aspect of the monitor we dislike most is the on-screen menu. It’s not pretty, but the real problem is the awkward controls which are mounted on the bottom edge of the display. They’re uncomfortable to use and the menus are slow to respond. There are plenty of options for those who love to tweak, though.
As well as sRGB, the User preset for colour temperature gives you control over red, green, blue, yellow, cyan and magenta levels. There’s a gamma control as well as the usual dynamic contrast, which we preferred to leave disabled. The Eco menu is a misnomer, since it contains the image presets, including Standard, Text, Internet, Game, Movie and Sports. The only way to control power consumption is to reduce brightness manually. At 100 per cent, we measured 35W, but this reduced to 22W at 0 per cent – a perfectly usable brightness level.
Although the resolution isn’t much lower than Full HD (you lose only 30 pixels vertically, and 120 pixels off each side, horizontally), the A2281Wd+ faces stiff competition from the Iiyama ProLite E2208HDD. This has a more even backlight and a Full HD resolution, yet costs the same, making it the better buy.
Written by
Jim Martin
Jim Martin is an editor at IDG UK and holds a BSc in Computer Science from the University of Kent. Known for his product reviews and testing, Jim’s portfolio includes Tech Advisor and Computer Shopper.