Page 4 of 5

Rebelstar wrote:Nice. Mine

Posted: 06 Oct 2011, 05:46
by S1L3N7D3A7H
Nice. Mine Benq 2420HDs have the same bodies


Yeah, It was actually your modification which inspired me to do mine. I saw that and was like: "Holy Shit; thats the same design as my monitor, I could do something like that!". Now I have some reason to do 3x120Hz XL2410T Eyefinity. Already got the adapters being sent my way.

Here is a link to my build

Posted: 07 Oct 2011, 23:08
by S1L3N7D3A7H
Here is a link to my build log under the AMD Eyefinity Section.

http://widescreengamingforum.com/forum/forums/multi-monitor-gaming/amd-eyefinity-discussions/17699/3-x-120hz-eyefinity-build-log-benq

I have the 3x Asus VW266H and

Posted: 08 Oct 2011, 22:18
by Cinnabuns
Seraph,

I have 3x Asus VW266H (not 246) and the VESA posts are welded on where you have 4 oval divets... curious.

Setiawan wrote:LG

Posted: 24 Oct 2011, 02:42
by chunhei


LG IPS231P-BN - Debezel 3 by J Setiawan, on Flickr

LG IPS231P-BN - Debezel 6 by J Setiawan, on Flickr


Thanks! You have same monitors I got, but now I thinking it's not worth all the effort for 2-3mm bezel width reduction in portrait mode.

do you use them in portrait or land?

ADSTA wrote:I decided to take

Posted: 30 Oct 2011, 14:46
by Wijkert
I decided to take the plunge and attempt to remove the cases off my three Dell U2311H.
Cases removed easily enough.
Then I came to a screaming halt.


I am having the same problem as you have. Removing the plastic cover of my U2311H's is not a problem, but mounting them is, since you need the back cover for that. Rebelstar said a possible solution was on a previous page of this thread, but I don't believe there is. Does anyone figured out how to solve this problem using the original stand for mounting?

Why is it a problem with the

Posted: 30 Oct 2011, 18:45
by skipclarke
Why is it a problem with the 2311H? The screw hole for the VESA mount is in the underlying metal, isn't it?

Ibrin wrote:Why is it a

Posted: 30 Oct 2011, 19:18
by Wijkert
Why is it a problem with the 2311H? The screw hole for the VESA mount is in the underlying metal, isn't it?


The standard mount does't use the VESA mount screwes if I am not mistaking, so if you remove the back cover you also remove holes that you need for connecting the monitor to the standard mount.

Oh... Ibrin made a Video of

Posted: 30 Oct 2011, 21:30
by Haldi
Oh... Ibrin made a Video of how he stripped a Dell.

But the Case isn't just for Optic... its also protectiv! Or not ? Any problems with dust or anything on a stripped monitor?

i want to try it.... but if i do i cant mount them on standard base. Well, not a problem, i can make a Mount myself quite easy...

Not sure if i should.... i think would be a big difference... but is so much work.

There is no problem with the

Posted: 05 Nov 2011, 04:06
by ADSTA
There is no problem with the VESA mounting.
You don't need the plastic case to mount with VESA on the Dell U23
You do ( I reckon) need the plastic case to keep everything together.
The way the monitor panel is connected to the mounting box is the problem.
They are not pop riveted together.
They are held together by tabs which I fear would not support the weight.

And yes Rebel, I had seen your solution.
It might work for you but no good for me.

Has any one bezel stripped a

Posted: 14 Dec 2011, 02:09
by pox67
Has any one bezel stripped a Dell U2312?

I have two arriving any day now and will give it a crack.

I am hoping to do 3 x portrait.

EDIT: just found the awesome guide by 3lfk1ng where he details the bezel strip of a Dell U2312.

nice thanks for the tip i

Posted: 16 Dec 2011, 14:41
by ritchietos
nice thanks for the tip i stripped my monitors yesterday and this is the result now when watching a movie

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezSCr9KqxgY

wow very nice.

Posted: 17 Dec 2011, 08:11
by suiken_2mieu
wow very nice.

I'm looking at this image

Posted: 17 Apr 2012, 11:08
by kinkade-thomas


I'm looking at this image from an LCD projector build-log and contemplating Eyefinity. Once rectified and scaled, Photoshop tells me that this 17" stripped laptop monitor appears to have internal bezels of 0.19" on the right, 0.10" on the top, 0.11" on the left, and 0.21" on the bottom of the screen. This represents a third of an inch black gap from one screen to the next. It's about an equivalent gap to holding a Bic pen between the adjacent pixels. The steel casing that supports the actual panel is intact, one only needs to exercise common sense in not bending/cracking the thin panel and be careful with the thin ribbon cables, which are nearly impossible to fix. The other boards need to be supported as well.

But this is a hobby that has extreme case-modders hanging around welding automotive radiators to their WW2-era ammo boxes. Surely we can replace a piece of injection-molded plastic.

As far as I can tell, a third of an inch combined is far better than any retail consumer monitor, but not quite a match for "seamless" professional-level multi-panel monitors, which run about 10x the cost for an equivalent product.

Independant resale value and warranty coverage are probably not going to survive this step (assuming that the panel itself does), but there's gotta be some people who would pay a mint for a 3-panel frame - if you succeed, you'll be able to unload it.

So is LCD stripping going to come into vogue?

how can you tell if a monitor

Posted: 10 Jun 2012, 14:53
by jondfudge
........................

how can you tell if a monitor

Posted: 10 Jun 2012, 14:57
by jondfudge
I've debezelled 6 dell 17'' monitors.

How do you avoid getting an electric shock when plugging them in and turning them on?

I haven't tried yet but..... do I need shock proof tape to tape the green chip panel and the rubber keypad or do I try and ouch the tape on just the rubber part?


The dells im using are prety identical to those on page three of this thread either the 1707fp or 1708fp's .

When debezelled a strip of rubber with the buttons falls out the case the same size as the green strip of buttons. If I was to actually press the metal on the green chip when power lead is plugged in and on at the wall would I effetcively electricute myself?

cheers

bump

Posted: 10 Jun 2012, 14:57
by jondfudge
bump

Re: Stripped monitors for thin bezel

Posted: 25 Nov 2012, 23:48
by leop
Just some input for GL2450 users

I debezzeled my 3x
Monitor Model: BenQ GL2450
Monitor Id: BNQ78A5

All of them had floating box, not attached to screen 1 monitor had different model of floating box and stand. Taped it to screen with tape recommended from hardware store.
Also the vesa mounts is on the outer plastic bezel so by removing bezel the mounts is removed. Read that some users drilled (with crossed fingers hoping not to damage anything) holes in floating box with success

Re: Stripped monitors for thin bezel

Posted: 09 Apr 2013, 05:02
by troyBORG
Gunja wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r2LRhE1ACsQ video

This video contains content from UMPG Publishing, Sony ATV Publishing and EMI, one or more of whom have blocked it in your country on copyright grounds.

Your video must of has music in it :(

Re: Stripped monitors for thin bezel

Posted: 29 May 2013, 19:00
by Gunja
Now it has some youtube offered melody and it should work fine world wide.

Re: Stripped monitors for thin bezel

Posted: 27 Jul 2013, 15:17
by Greyhawk101
Warning for LG E2351 users.

I de-bezzled mine this morning easily enough (took 15 minutes for all three) however if you debezzel this monitor you will lose your VESA mounts. Luckily I'm using a cobbled together stand so I don't need them yet but just a warning if you are planning to do this and have a monitor stand. You will also lose the ability to use the stand that came with the monitor as this is screwed into a mounting on the plastic case, not the monitor.