Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
Question regarding mirror and monitor bezel.
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@EventHorizon Really it comes down to personal preference. If it annoys you now, especially considering the price premium for glass, then I’d say it will continue to annoy you (it would annoy me, in this situation).
In this case, this is with the sample sitting right on the screen correct? As in there is no gap? I have a small gap with mine, but I don’t see this reflection, so I’d say this isn’t typical. You may want to try another glass supplier to see if their sample also has this problem.
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@j.e.f.f Yeah it’s sitting right on the glass. I’m hoping it’s the glass and not the monitor. I’m not sure why the effect is happening though. Any ideas? I may have to try the standard two way glass and see how this compares. If not, I’ll have to go for the acrylic.
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@EventHorizon said in Question regarding mirror and monitor bezel.:
Yeah it’s sitting right on the glass.
Does this mean your TV has a glass in front of the screen, then you are putting the glass mirror over top? I think you’re seeing reflection as the result of the glass-on-glass situation. I think you may have this problem no matter what mirror you put in front of it. In which case, the acrylic might be the better choice for you, as the back side won’t reflect as much light back at the TV.
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@j.e.f.f Apologies, I may have confused you. The monitor does NOT have glass in front of the screen, only the two samples that I placed directly on top of the monitor. So I’m not really sure why the reflection is present. So just to confirm there is no glass on glass. So i’m not really sure why the reflection is present. Any ideas Jeff?
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@EventHorizon I’d try a sample from another manufacturer to see if the problem goes away.