
So I moved back to my parents' place for max 2 months since I graduated from university and needed a place to stay at. I found my old 19" Dell P992 CRT standing in my old room - and since I had my Samsung and my computer with me, I decided to do some input lag testing myself with my dad's digital camera. I'm sorry for the REALLY bad quality of the pictures, but it's in the middle of the night (dark) and the shutter was set to 1/1000s. I know that it is not even visually possible to determine the monitor types... If you don't believe me, I'll try to take pictures at daytime.
Here are the pictures:
http://home.arcor.de/boyp/pics/inputlagtest/1.jpg
http://home.arcor.de/boyp/pics/inputlagtest/2.jpg
http://home.arcor.de/boyp/pics/inputlagtest/3.jpg
http://home.arcor.de/boyp/pics/inputlagtest/4.jpg
http://home.arcor.de/boyp/pics/inputlagtest/5.jpg
http://home.arcor.de/boyp/pics/inputlagtest/6.jpg
http://home.arcor.de/boyp/pics/inputlagtest/7.jpg
http://home.arcor.de/boyp/pics/inputlagtest/8.jpg
http://home.arcor.de/boyp/pics/inputlagtest/9.jpg
*EDIT*
better picture:
http://home.arcor.de/boyp/pics/inputlagtest/P1000996.jpg
*EDIT #2*
h8m3 suggested a more accurate testing method in this post.
The results from that were the following: Within the 19 pictures I took, none was further behind than 0.5 frames, which makes a maximum of 4ms effective input lag (since 1 frame at 120hz is ~8ms). The lowest effective input lag was at 0.3 frames, which makes a minimum of 2.5ms. As an average number I calculated ~0.4 frames, which is ~3.3ms.
I think those numbers a pretty reasonable, considering nowadays' pixel response times...
Edited by crack at 07:52 CDT, 18 August 2009 - 10858 Hits