Dell G2410

| Specifications | |||
| Screen size | 24 inches | ||
| Panel type | TN | ||
| Resolution | 1920 x 1080 | ||
| Response time | 5 ms | ||
| Inputs (HDMI / DVI / VGA / Component) | 0 / 1 / 1 / 0 | ||
See all specifications | |||
| Other details | Ambient light sensor |
| Viewing angles (H/V) | 170 ° / 160 ° |
| 3D | no |
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Alexandre Botella
Updated: August 18, 2009 - Test date: August 10, 2009
Updated: August 18, 2009 - Test date: August 10, 2009
Dell's green promises

Dell has done everything it can to seduce consumers keen to purchase environmentally-friendly products. Recycled components make up 25% of the external frame of the G2410, and arsenic and mercury have been removed from the glass and the back-lighting system respectively. All of the packaging materials are entirely recyclable. Even the transport is more eco-friendly, with smaller boxes, allowing more screens to fit into the same container.
The G2410's consumption can be adjusted using a special sensor which adjusts the brightness in response to ambient light levels. As you can see in the Product Face-Off, it is already very economical in its energy usage.
The G2410's consumption can be adjusted using a special sensor which adjusts the brightness in response to ambient light levels. As you can see in the Product Face-Off, it is already very economical in its energy usage.
Handling

The G2410 includes a 5 ms TN panel with a resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels, but the only possible movement is tipping the screen back a little. It's impossible to move it up and down, or to rotate it to portrait orientation. HDMI is conspicuous by its absence, making way for DVI and VGA, and there's no sound. In short: it has all the hardware features of a standard 22'' monitor, and nothing else.
Gaming
| Average ghosting over ten frames | ![]() |
Responsiveness


Colours
| Default Colours |
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| Ideal Colours |
Compare the Dell G2410 to other LCD Monitors in our Product Face-Offs
Color handling

For those of you that haven't been following, here's a brief recap of how a deltaE score works. It's the average discrepancy between the colours sent by the graphics card and those actually displayed on screen. In all but the most extreme cases, a deltaE under 3.0 is too small to be noticed by the untrained eye. Even the best screens don't manage to get under 2.0
To return to the case in hand, the colours aren't awful, but anybody will be able to see the discrepancies without too much effort. It's not a fatal flaw for the monitor, and a little calibration will improve matters.
''Maybe it's not that important for you, but for me ...''
| Contrast Ratio (x:1) | Black Levels ( cd/m² ) |
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| 100 cd/m² 200 cd/m² | 100 cd/m² 200 cd/m² |
Compare the Dell G2410 to other LCD Monitors in our Product Face-Offs
In two years of testing monitors, this is a first for me. This is the first screen that I've seen that has a contrast ratio that actually matches up with reality. According to Dell's website, the G2410 has a contrast ratio of 100:1. Whether that's at a brightness of 100 cd/m² or 200 cd/m², we measured exactly the same figures. Dell deserves praise just for sticking to their advertised figures and not producing meaningless ads that claim contrast ratios that the products will never live up to.
Films
Here, our first concern was to check whether the reverse ghosting that affected games was problem in films too. Fortunately, even The Matrix, full of exactly those fast-moving dark objects that cause this problem, didn't prove difficult. There was still a lot of blurriness, though, and there is no attempt at upscaling. Basically, this monitor doesn't stand out from any others when it comes to films, either for better or for worse
Pluses
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High contrast ratio
Minuses
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TN panel, so poor vertical viewing angles
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Few extra options
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Some reverse ghosting
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Colours could be more accurate

It's a difficult choice: on the one hand, this is a very green product, but on the other, a lot of small problems have stacked up. It's up to you to decide which way to go.








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