Quantcast
BROWSE ARTICLES BY CATEGORY
Gateway FPD2485W 24" Widescreen LCD
 
Author:
Editor:
Sponsor:
Published:
Anthony Fiti
Kurtis
Gateway
Apr. 9, 2007
First Looks

The Gateway FPD2485W 24" LCD Monitor arrives in the normal Gateway moo-cow box complete with black spots and a picture of the monitor on the front of the box. In addition Gateway was nice enough to send the speaker bar attachment along with the monitor for review. The monitor is heavy. The box weighed 30lbs, which might explain why Gateway charges so much for shipping (currently $55).


The monitor came in three parts in a box (plus the speaker bar in another box): the base, the stand and the LCD. Everything was packed with enough padding to make sure that it would be safe in transport and getting everything out was a breeze.

Like similar 24" monitors from their competitors, the Gateway 24" monitor has a 4-port USB port (two on the left side and two on the bottom), as well as input for video in addition to your standard VGA and DVI inputs. On the bottom of the monitor next to the VGA and DVI inputs are the composite video and S-Video inputs, along with two component (Y Pr Pb) inputs supporting 480i, 480p, 720p and 1080p.


You get a DVI and VGA cable with the display, along with a CD with the EZ-Tune software and a printed user's manual. The user's manual was nice, as it featured full instructions on assembly, usage, and an extensive FAQ section that would answer most people's questions. You'll also find the optional speaker bar's own user's guide in its box, if you get one.


Specifications

The Gateway FPD2485W 24" LCD Monitor is an 8-bit panel, which supports 16.7M colors. The panel is an S-PVA sporting a 6ms grey to grey response time, which is sufficiently low to prevent ghosting and other response time artifacts.

Just like most of the other 24" LCDs, it supports a resolution of 1920x1200 with a .27mm pixel pitch. The display has a 16:10 aspect ratio. It also has the swivel capabilities to allow you to put the display in portrait mode, which I happen to prefer. Though putting it in portrait orientation will look weird with the optional speaker bar located at the bottom of the display.

Gateway advertises a brightness of 450cd/m2 and a contrast ratio of 1000:1, neither figure I doubt. Because the display is so bright, that will bring up the contrast ratio dramatically compared to a monitor that isn't as bright even if they have the same black level.

 
<< Previous
Page 2 of 8
Next >>
Page 1: Introduction
Page 2: First Looks & Tech Specs
Page 3: Taking a Closer Look
Page 4: Setup
Page 5: Testing - Display
Page 6: Testing - Features
Page 7: Max's Thoughts
Page 8: Conclusion
Subscribe to Computer Display [more info]


10 User Comments
1 - Posted by Ryley on April 30, 2007 - 10:45 pm

I bought the Gateway FPD2485W 24" Widescreen LCD about 2 months ago. I had planned on getting the 24'' Dell, but found this on sale at a near by electronics chain for $649. Being impatient, I got the Gateway. I'm mainly a gamer and I've had no issues or problems with it. Based on my experience I'd recommend it.

2 - Posted by Kurtis on May 1, 2007 - 12:54 am

Welcome to our forums, Ryley, and thank you for sharing your experience with the Gateway 24" LCD. :)

3 - Posted by treesfall on May 13, 2007 - 10:27 am

I bought this monitor and returned it once so far for the backlight issue...it had a light grey spot about the size of a lemon in the upper right corner...I have a photo I could upload if interested..that monitor was a febuary 07 build. I exchanged it at circuit city for a march build. The backlight is better, I can live with what I see but it is not perfect. I am using the monitor in analog and I want to use DVI to see if it helps the picture, but I am having a problem with that. With DVI conected, everything looks great through the windows 2000 startup screen. After the startup screen, when the desktop should be visible, the screen goes blank and says "no input". I don't know if it is monitor related or card related. I'm having a love-hate relationship with this thing so far. Oh, another thing, text is not sharp all across the screen, there are sharp patches and fuzzy patches scattered around. I was hoping DVI would fix that but I can't get DVI to work. Color banding is not very noticible in the photoshop gradient test as described in this article, but I do notice it when watching a movie if a glowing light or similar is part of the picture. That's my thoughts for now, I have been using this march monitor for a week now.

4 - Posted by Max Slowik on May 13, 2007 - 11:20 am

No shit? Me too, the upper right corner is the worst. I mean, it's not as bad as it could be, I don't want to make it seem like it's catastrophic, and I've definitely seen LCD displays with some more prominent pinching/warping of the TFT around the edges, but it's at least noticeable when you're looking at it.

I've been using light or gray backgrounds to mitigate it.

I want to RMA this monitor so badly, but I need it right now because I'm reviewing video cards :)

Kurtis, make someone send me a display so I can RMA this one.

(I still love the PiP stuff. It's priceless.)

5 - Posted by treesfall on May 14, 2007 - 8:18 am

The upper right corner of mine was terrible. I could see that spot all the time, even on a fairly busy backround picture. It made watching a movie really annoying. the problem seemed heat related, screen looked fine when cold, half hour later that upper right corner was really warm in the back compared to the rest of it. My fuzzy text issue was fixed with an auto adjust, oops, shoulda done that before complaining. My DVI issue is my gfx card I am pretty sure. I threw on V for Vendetta last night to review the color banding again, it really looks bad displaying smoke and glowing lights, I mean really bad. Still not sure if this thing is a keeper, but the extra desktop space is awesome and other than movie watching (which is 75% of the reason I bought this thing) I do like it.

6 - Posted by sirebral on May 23, 2007 - 10:21 pm

I bought this monitor in December. I am going to have to take it back because the USB ports have totally failed. They won't even drive a 16 mb thumb drive. In addition, I am having the same issue with a bright spot in the upper left corner. Also, the PIP function is messed up. Every time I use it and the monitor goes into sleep mode, it forgets which input it is on and I have to unplug it to get it to recognize that it is still attached to my running computer.

7 - Posted by Nate on August 3, 2007 - 8:00 am

Ive had this monitor for about 3 months,I bought it at Best Buy for 550 dollars,and I use my pc mostly for gaming.I installed the Nvidia geforce 8500 GT graphics card and the graphics are great.I havent had one single problem with this monitor yet.I would recomend it to anyone who is looking for a widescreen monitor.Not only does it perform well,it has some nice features too.

8 - Posted by wlb on August 9, 2007 - 9:20 am

guys see my review-the comments across the net have been rife with problems, but honestly i haven't had any with this monitor-perhaps it's a quality control problem with Gateway because their stock has been tanking and they are dumping money into the don't pass line

9 - Posted by PaulyC on October 10, 2008 - 5:11 pm

I posted over at the "main" thread of the FPD2485W at AVS. My monitor is just a bit over a year old and some faints spots which are right in the middle of the screen have become much worse. I called Gateway when the monitor was well within the support range, but couldn't get through to anyone.... I attributed it to normal LCD clouding, I work normally with dark Interfaced screens, Photoshop etc. so it never bothered me much,

So now that it's worse,
I called Gateway again, their support is beyond bad, they couldn't even find my monitor until after being put on hold 3 times. Then I was of course told that my monitor is a couple months out of warranty and couldnt be covered, I tried to explain to them that the spots have been there for awhile, but now the spots have worsened.... even had the person agree that burn-in spots couldn't happen overnight, but she didn't budge.. I of course won't be buying any Gateway products in the future, so tired of companies making products that break soon after the warranty expires... its all a conspiracy right??? hah
So a warning, for others whom may buy a similar Gateway product...

When I tried to call back in February, and couldn't even get past the first automated question which was enter your 10 digit Serial #... I bought mine at Best Buy so perhaps they use a different # for them? but it's a 13 digit Serial #.. When you didnt enter a serial # their computer recognizes, (i tried many different versions) it didn't send you to another menu..or an operator.. the automated person said sorry and hung up on you.. sounds like a good operation haha.

When I called this week they had the same opening automated Serial #.. couldn't get it to work, hangs up on you if you don't enter the proper serial #... that's at best devious, and at worst criminal. Being a little more diligent this time, and after some investigation through the web I found a phone # which again asked the serial # but somehow got it to work, only after being on hold for 30 minutes.

I wouldn't recommend them for anything to be quite frank. And don't ever buy anything this expensive (comparatively) with only a year warranty, companies like Gateway use very low class screens and slap a one year warranty on them... They'll get you everytime...

10 - Posted by Kurtis on October 10, 2008 - 9:39 pm

PaulyC: Really sorry to hear about your terrible experience with Gateway - after we tested one, I'm not really surprised, but sorry to hear it nonetheless. Thanks for sharing, though, so others can learn from your experience.

Add Comment

To add a comment without being a member, you may omit the password field, but you must enter your name (or nickname) along with your comment. * Denotes required fields.

Username: *


Password: (optional)
(Remember my login information: )

Comment: *


What is 3+2?: *


 
 
 
Recent News