It's eeesy.
I recently put a 40w lightbulb into a socket surrounded by a translucent material known as glass that I got at Ikea. Then I placed it in back of my LCD and flicked it on and flicked the room lights off.
The image looks different, like it has more contrast. Not a whole lot more, but a bit more. Tested it out in Doom3 and it looks better playing with the light behind the LCD.
How does this happened? Elementary my forum-goers. Having a dim light in the room makes LCD blacks, blacker. However, having it in front of the screen causes some glaring negating that mental effect. So put it in the back of the screen, you still have light in the room, making the blacks darker and keeping the glare out. Idk if it works with a brighter light though. I think the point of it is to have a dim light, not a bright light. You test it.
			
			I recently put a 40w lightbulb into a socket surrounded by a translucent material known as glass that I got at Ikea. Then I placed it in back of my LCD and flicked it on and flicked the room lights off.
The image looks different, like it has more contrast. Not a whole lot more, but a bit more. Tested it out in Doom3 and it looks better playing with the light behind the LCD.
How does this happened? Elementary my forum-goers. Having a dim light in the room makes LCD blacks, blacker. However, having it in front of the screen causes some glaring negating that mental effect. So put it in the back of the screen, you still have light in the room, making the blacks darker and keeping the glare out. Idk if it works with a brighter light though. I think the point of it is to have a dim light, not a bright light. You test it.
 
				
		 
			 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
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