What causes the faint horizontal lines on my monitor?
Browse the article What causes the faint horizontal lines on my monitor?
You can see a faint horizontal line just above the tip of the cursor
- Shadow mask: The shadow mask in a CRT monitor is a metal screen filled with holes that sits just behind the phosphor layer. Red, green and blue electron guns each send a beam through a hole in the shadow mask to a single pixel triad of the tube's phosphor layer. Although this method keeps the image sharp, it diminishes the potential brightness of the screen (See How Television Works for details).
- Aperture grill: Instead of a metal screen, the aperture grill consists of tiny vertical wires. The pixels on the phosphor layer are arranged in vertical stripes instead of triangular groups. When the electron guns scan across a row, the wires isolate the pixels that the individual beams focus on. This approach has a couple of advantages over conventional shadow masking. First, the use of wires instead of a screen allows more of the energy from the electron gun through, which makes for a brighter image. Second, the potential vertical resolution of a display can be greater, since the aperture grill does not rely on the vertical spacing of pinholes as a shadow mask does.
The Trinitron patent recently expired, which is why you see Trinitron technology (and the faint lines) in other manufacturer's monitors now. Several companies have also developed hybrid variations that combine features of the aperture grill and the shadow mask.