jrowland
10-19-2011, 02:28 AM
So I was all excited when I completed my portable Saitek setup (http://www.mycockpit.org/forums/showthread.php/23450). After using it a few times, I'm a little disappointing by my MIP monitor. The whole thing sits below eye-level... the top of the frame is about level with my chin, and I'm about 20-22 inches away from it. My problem is that the gauges are virtually un-seeable at this angle. I either see the black part of the gauges really well, and nothing else... or an outline of the gauge with none of the black parts showing (like the face of the instrument).
I've managed to develop a "workaround" by angling the monitor upwards so that as I look "down" at it, it's being viewed "straight on". But this defeats the purpose... 1) it doesn't "look right" (the setup as a whole), and 2) my plan is to continue expanding this sideways for a copilot position. If I can't see the thing right in front of my nose, the copilot probably will have the same issues as well.
I've also made it slightly better by designing a different 2D panel with all black background and the gauges made a little bigger than what is shown in the pictures on the link above.
After googling around for "LCD Viewing Angles", I've only managed to confuse myself more with terms such as "contrast ratios", "viewing cones", "Advanced contrast", "dynamic contrast". etc. I'm wondering if there is a simple "solution", and if not, what kind of specs would I look for in a replacement monitor? Is it maybe the quality of the gauges (default FSX Cessna), and a payware set of gauges might look better? Would a stand-alone program displaying gauges through WideFS look better? Or is it the monitor itself?
I have no idea what the specs of this current monitor are - I picked it up from someone who did not need it, and there are no books/documents with it.
Thanks for any education on this and ideas. Many people use "MIP Monitors", so I can't be the only one with this problem... or there are solutions that I've missed.
I've managed to develop a "workaround" by angling the monitor upwards so that as I look "down" at it, it's being viewed "straight on". But this defeats the purpose... 1) it doesn't "look right" (the setup as a whole), and 2) my plan is to continue expanding this sideways for a copilot position. If I can't see the thing right in front of my nose, the copilot probably will have the same issues as well.
I've also made it slightly better by designing a different 2D panel with all black background and the gauges made a little bigger than what is shown in the pictures on the link above.
After googling around for "LCD Viewing Angles", I've only managed to confuse myself more with terms such as "contrast ratios", "viewing cones", "Advanced contrast", "dynamic contrast". etc. I'm wondering if there is a simple "solution", and if not, what kind of specs would I look for in a replacement monitor? Is it maybe the quality of the gauges (default FSX Cessna), and a payware set of gauges might look better? Would a stand-alone program displaying gauges through WideFS look better? Or is it the monitor itself?
I have no idea what the specs of this current monitor are - I picked it up from someone who did not need it, and there are no books/documents with it.
Thanks for any education on this and ideas. Many people use "MIP Monitors", so I can't be the only one with this problem... or there are solutions that I've missed.