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To mount to a wall, the monitor accepts a standard VESA 100x100 mount. You basically remove the stand and that allows access to the mount points. The LED/LCD issue is a little trickier. The display itself is LCD, but it uses brighter LED backlighting as the light source which is generally better than the older CCFL method, so it's a combination of both technologies. Hope that helps.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.The VESA mounting holes are concealed by 4 rubber grommets, use finger nail to pop them out. Remove the four screws that hold the mount for the included stand. Use those screws to attach monitor to wall mount or stand alone mount that attaches to desk (which is what I used). With mount attached to desk I can rotate left or right 90 degrees. Right click on desktop, select Display Settings, change orientation as needed. Select Advanced display setting to set refresh rate. I'm using two monitors with two computers. The computer connected via Display Port can be setup for G-Sync, HDMI cannot.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.It has a VESA mount on the back of the screen. you can pull off a panel that has the TUF Gaming logo on the back and it will expose the mount.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.This monitor accepts a standard VESA mount plate--usable on a wall or on other mounts. This is an 'IPS' display screen; look online for a full discussion of screen types.
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