This document describes the warranty terms for all ViewSonic LCD products.
WHAT WARRANTY COVERS
ViewSonic warrants its products to be free from defects in material and workmanship during the warranty period. If a product proves to be defective in material or workmanship during the warranty period, ViewSonic will, at its sole option, repair or replace the product with a similar or equivalent product. Replacement products or parts may include remanufactured or refurbished parts or components.
LCD MONITOR
ViewSonic LCD monitors cover three (3) years “Carry-in Service” with limited warranty on parts and labor subjected to:
Pixel warranty criteria:
Purchase Category | Bright Piexl | Dark Piexl |
---|---|---|
20" & below LCD | 3 | 3 |
or a combination of 3 | ||
21" & greater LCD | 5 | 5 |
or a combination of 5 |
*Carry-in Service: End user needs to carry-in the unit for repair on his/her cost.
GENERAL TERMS & CONDITIONS
Warranty is valid only for the first consumer purchaser. In order to receive warranty service, proof of purchase of the ViewSonic product is required.
Warranty does not cover:
Limitation of implied warranties:
There are no warranties, express or implied, which extend beyond the description contained herein including the implied warranty of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose. Exclusion of damages:
Sales outside Philippines
For ViewSonic products sold outside Philippines, contact your ViewSonic dealer or ViewSonic for warranty information and service.
HOW TO OBTAIN WARRANTY SERVICE
For information on obtaining warranty service, you may call your ViewSonic dealer or ViewSonic Service Centre or email to service.ph@viewsonic.com .
To obtain warranty service, customer is required to provide:
This article has detail description on how ViewSonic defines LCD pixel criteria for warranty of LCD flat-panel displays.
ViewSonic is committed to customer satisfaction by providing the highest quality products in the industry. The result is that our LCD displays generally have very few non-performing pixels. For example, an 18" SXGA (1280 x 1024) display has nearly 4 million sub-pixels. A product exhibiting 7 non-performing pixels would equate to an extremely small 0.00018 percent of the total sub-pixels.
(1280 Horizontal Pixels) * (1024 Vertical Pixels) * (3 sub-pixels per pixel) = 3,932,160 sub-pixels
[(7 non-performing pixels) / (3,932,160 sub-pixels)] * 100% = 0.00018%
It is possible that any replacement display may also have some non-performing sub-pixels. This should be considered when requesting a warranty exchange.
Explanation
A pixel or picture element, is composed of three sub-pixels in the primary colors of red, green, and blue. At each pixel position in an AMLCD (active matrix liquid crystal display) flat screen monitor, three cells of liquid crystal material form the red, green and blue sub-pixels that together allow the full range of colors to be displayed. Individual transistors are arranged in an array on the rear glass to control each sub-pixel. An anomaly on any one of these individual transistors will cause a bright or dark pixel to appear. These anomalies generally occur only during manufacturing, and additional bright or dark pixels should not appear over time.
The allowable number of non-performing pixels has a direct impact on the yield of the process. If the industry attempted to set a zero standard, the current manufacturing yield would be so low that the cost of an LCD display would be many times higher than it is today. Luckily, most customers and applications are tolerant of a low level of non-performing pixels and prefer the lower cost that the existing standards allow.