• About
  • Contact Us
  • Licensing
  • Press Relations
  • Privacy
  • Submission Policy

Reviewboard Magazine

AOC E2237Fwh Monitor Review

1
  • by Review_Crew
  • In Featured Articles
  • — 11 Jul, 2010
Download article to your eReader:
Download PDF
Download ePub
Download mobi


The $229 LED-based AOC e2237Fwh performs decently and has a striking and unique aesthetic style. The monitor has built-in speakers, a robust On Screen Display, and, unlike the similarly designed Asus MS238H, the AOC includes both HDMI and DVI support. However, the panel is never at a full 90 degrees, giving the display a constant non-optimal viewing angle, which adversely affects performance. If a low-priced, decent-performing monitor with some aesthetic panache is what you’re looking for, the AOC e2237wh will fit that requirement quite well.

Design and Features
The 22-inch AOC e2237Fwh has a black bezel that contrasts nicely with its white back. At the center bottom of the bezel is a blue, glowing power button that also doubles as the On Screen Display (OSD) array menu button. Below the bezel is a blue LED “desk light” that stretches horizontally across the middle of the monitor, illuminating the desktop space below it. The entire chassis is enclosed in a transparent plastic casing. The casing extends downward, past the bottom of the bezel until it reaches the desktop.

Its unique footstand keeps the e2237Fwh constantly tilted back 5 or 15 degrees, so it is never at a perfect 90 degree angle. The stand keeps the monitor stabilized when knocked from the sides; however, when it encounters a strong enough force from the front, it will topple over quite easily. The bezel is 1.2 inches wide on the sides and the panel is a short 0.7 inch deep at its shallowest and about 1.75 inches at its deepest depth. The monitor does not have height, pivot, or swivel adjustment options.

Connection options include VGA, HDMI, and DVI. These ports are located on the back of the display, on the lower right side. Unfortunately, they are embedded about an inch into the chassis and so are not as easily accessible as they are on the . To the right of the VGA input is an audio jack for the built-in speakers.

As previously mentioned, the power button doubles as the OSD menu button. Surrounding it are four touch areas, each denoted by a small blue LED dot. Each dot is a shortcut to different OSD functions, including Presets, Speaker volume, Source, and an aspect ratio switch. Pressing the power button brings up the OSD menu, which can be navigated with the four touch area dots acting as directional keys.

The OSD includes controls for contrast, brightness, gamma, and an Eco Mode that lowers the brightness automatically. The display includes seven main presets, as well as color temperature presets options such as Cool, Normal, Warm, SRGB, and User Mode. The Display also includes an ambient light sensor.

Games: Because of our intimate familiarity with World of Warcraft, it remains the best tool for judging color quality and vibrancy in games. We found that the Game mode preset (represented by the Xbox-like control pad icon) displayed colors that were mostly accurate, but didn’t pop nearly as well as on the PX2370. The PX2370 is able to walk that fine line of having eye-popping colors without over saturating the image.

Photos: We looked at some photos in the Photo preset and noticed a green tint in faces and environments. We found that the sRGB color preset, coupled with the default/standard overall preset, provided the best photo picture quality in terms of color accuracy. Still, the PX2370 looked better overall, with even more accurate colors and clarity.

Viewing angle: The optimal viewing angle for a monitor is usually directly in front, about a quarter of the screen’s distance down from the top. At this angle, you’re viewing the colors as they were intended by the manufacturer. Most monitors are not made to be viewed at any other angle. Depending on its panel type, picture quality at non-optimal angles varies. Most monitors use TN panels, which get overly bright or overly dark in parts of the screen when viewed from non-optimal angles. The AOC e2237wh uses a TN panel, and when it’s viewed from the sides, we perceived the screen darken about 6 inches off from center (a typical viewing angle limit for a TN-based monitor). Using default settings, the PX2370 had a typical viewing angle threshold; however, it includes extra features that improve viewing from specific angles.

Recommended settings and use: During general use, playing games, and when watching movies, we found the optimal preset setting for the AOC e2237Fwh was the default/standard preset, with the contrast adjusted to 43. For photo editing and games, sRGB worked best.

As with most TN-based monitors, the AOC e2237Fwh isn’t meant to be used if accurate color reproduction is required; however, the monitor is good for watching movies, playing games, and general use. If you do have stringent color needs, we suggest you narrow your search to IPS or PVA-based panels only. The Dell UltraSharp U2711 is a good place to start.

Download article to your eReader:
Download PDF
Download ePub
Download mobi

Share this:

  • Share
  • Facebook
Share

Tags: AOCMonitor

Verizon Wireless Motorola Droid 3 Review

July 11, 2010 | Featured Articles | 1 Comment

I've been a HUGE fan of Motorola since the dawn of time.  I'm putting that out there because I've owned or used as a function of the work I do almost every Motorola cellular device geared toward a consumer. (brick phone anyone?) Motorola has some terrific hardware in their cellular devices, and it...

[ read more ]

Tag: 3g, android, cell-phone, cellular, droid-3, gingerbread, motorola, original, smart-phone, verizon-wireless

Nike Amp+ iPod Control Watch Review

July 11, 2010 | Featured Articles | 1 Comment

The Nike Amp+ iPod control watch is unusual for many reasons. To start with, it only displays hours and minutes. No seconds, no date, no alarm, no stopwatch. And to see the time, you actually have to press a button to illuminate the LED display. But the Amp+ isn't designed to be an all-around runni...

[ read more ]

Tag: mens-watches, watches

LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1-4 Review

July 11, 2010 | Featured Articles | 1 Comment

The cards were stacked against LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1-4. This is the fourth franchise to get the LEGO treatment and something like the seventh LEGO game if you include the double-dip on the Star Wars adventures. People know the formula of stud collecting, character unlocking and drop-in/drop-out...

[ read more ]

Tag: ps3-game

  • Previous story LG BD550 Blu ray Player Review
  • Next story Archos 5 Internet tablet with Android Review
  • Pingback: is this a good computer for school and playing games like world of warcraft and maybe others? ?

  • Follow us on Twitter!

    Follow @review_crew
  • Login

    Sign-Up/Login to Reviewboard
  • Add Link to Facebook

  • Translator

    English flagItalian flagKorean flagChinese (Simplified) flagChinese (Traditional) flagPortuguese flagGerman flagFrench flagSpanish flagJapanese flagArabic flagRussian flagGreek flagDutch flagBulgarian flagCzech flagCroatian flagDanish flagFinnish flagHindi flagPolish flagRomanian flagSwedish flagNorwegian flagCatalan flagFilipino flagHebrew flagIndonesian flagLatvian flagLithuanian flagSerbian flagSlovak flagSlovenian flagUkrainian flagVietnamese flagAlbanian flagEstonian flagGalician flagMaltese flagThai flagTurkish flagHungarian flagBelarus flagIrish flagIcelandic flagMacedonian flagMalay flagPersian flag
  • Categories

    • Audio/Video
    • Cellular Devices
    • Computer Hardware
    • Edibles
    • Fashion
    • Featured
    • Featured Articles
    • Household Products
    • Kitchen Products
    • Movie Reviews
    • Musical Devices
    • PC Games
    • Perfect 10s
    • Rentals
    • Reviews
    • Security Products
    • Small Business
    • Software
    • Sports and Recreation
    • Tools
    • Website Reviews
    • Wii Games
    • Xbox 360 Games
  • Last Month

    • Goldenfrog VyprVPN and Dump Truck Service Offered Through Giganews Review: I'm sure a lot of you have heard of the term "VPN" (Virtual Private Network). Do you know what it is? Some of you may even use a VPN to connect to wor...
    • Evil Dead 2013 (Movie Review): “Evil Dead (2013)” Director: Fede Alvarez Producers: Bruce Campbell, Sam Raimi, etc Writers: Fede Alvarez, Diablo Cody, Rodo Sayagues, Sam Raimi (1...
    • Roger Ebert Dead - End of an Era: We regret to inform you that Legendary Film Critic Roger Ebert passed away today. When I was a kid living in Chicago Siskel and Ebert were the Film Cr...
    • Oz The Great And Powerful (Movie Review): This week, Papa Kenn reviews the prequel to "The Wizard of Oz", the world famous musical that practically everyone knows! Does this new film, OZ THE G...
    • HoverCam T5 Office Scanner Camera Review: hat is a HoverCam T5? It is one of those things that fits nicely in its own category.  It is a camera/scanner but with a twist.  It takes high resolut...
  • Associated Press National Association of Hispanic Journalists
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Licensing
  • Press Relations
  • Privacy
  • Submission Policy

(c)1997-2013 by Random Publishing, Inc. All rights Reserved