Samsung SyncMaster 193P

The Samsung 193P is an LCD that we have looked at before. Many may recall our exclusive preview of the Samsung 193P back in April. Our 193P boasted extremely ambitious specifications, which stirred a bit of controversy - 800:1 contrast ratios seem a bit unheard of. Samsung's official statement remains that there were multiple versions of the LCD with identical specifications, but different contrast ratios. We continued to ignore the specification altogether and just tested the monitor for ourselves. Six months later, we revisited this LCD monitor (with a store-bought sample) and ran it through the LCD testing gauntlet along with the other monitors.



There is no denying it - Samsung's design puts the other monitors in this roundup to shame. Most of our other LCDs today are entry level models, but there is no reason why every monitor shouldn't look as good as the SyncMaster 193P.

 Samsung SyncMaster 193P
LCD 19" SXGA LCD (Active Matrix)
pixel pitch: 0.294mm
Anti-glare coating
PVA Display Mode
Scanning Frequency Horizontal: 30-81kHz
Vertical: 56-75Hz
Response Time 20ms (Typical)
Contrast Ratio 800:1 (Typical)
Compatibility 1280 x 1024 (Native)
Brightness 250 cd/m2
Viewing Angle 178 / 178 (Horizontal / Vertical)
Power Working: 40W
Standby/Off: 5W
Warranty 3 years parts and labor
Interface DVI
15-pin D-sub

The monitor specifications for the 193P remain largely unchanged, since we looked at the unit several months ago, but the LTM190E4 panel specifications seem to have changed slightly (and Samsung's own internal documentation seem to disagree). In fact, the LTM specifications actually claim that the monitor has a 1000:1 contrast ratio instead of the advertised 800:1 ratio.

Again, for an in-depth analysis of our SyncMaster 193P, please check the original review from April.

Planar PE191M Samsung SyncMaster 910V
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  • MAME - Tuesday, November 30, 2004 - link

    thank god the dell 2001fp is the (2nd) best one here. I got it for $650 a few days ago on a whim. The reviews are kinda mixed but there's a 21 day return policy. Problem is, it's 21 days from the invoice and the expected shipping date would put the LCD in my hands AFTER that time. Thus, I couldn't return it even .1 seconds after receiving it :-/

    Alas, it seems the monitor is a good choice nonetheless and I should have decent product on my hands soon. My eyes can't wait!
  • Peter - Tuesday, November 30, 2004 - link

    Because that's a barenaked LCD Panel, not a finished product?
  • Azsen - Tuesday, November 30, 2004 - link

    Hi, why does no-one have any information on this monitor:

    http://www.samsung.com/Products/TFTLCD/Monitors_n_...

    19" 8ms response, 600:1 ratio
  • Peter - Tuesday, November 30, 2004 - link

    Regarding the aspect ratio: If someone had taken the time to actually MEASURE, they would have found that all those LCD panels that sport a 1280x1024 resolution actually do measure 5:4, thus having correct aspect ratio at that resolution. Moot point, actually.

    (Running a CRT at 1280x1024 is wrongwrongwrong, though.)

    Peter
  • ceefka - Tuesday, November 30, 2004 - link

    #4 Jeff7181: LCD's use less power, take up less space (especially from 19" on) and produce less interference and heat. That times 2 if you are working with 2 screens. If a CRT works for you, then fine. It's not so much ignorance as it is choice.
  • KristopherKubicki - Tuesday, November 30, 2004 - link

    D0rkIRL: Thanks for the catch. Fixed.

    bookem dano: We know of the problem and we should have it fixed soon.

    klah: I was only aware of Xbitlabs doing so. We feel that the methods for measuring reponse time thus far are OK, but not represent gray to gray response time measurements well. Its something we are working on and we will probably have a better methodology before the next roundup.

    Kristopher
  • bookem dano - Tuesday, November 30, 2004 - link

    For some reason while looking at this article, my cpu was pegged at 100%.

    I tried IE, Net, FIre, all same thing. Quite annoying.
  • carlivar - Tuesday, November 30, 2004 - link

    OK so the tips at the beginning say to get a monitor with the correct aspect ratio such as 1280x960 resolution. I agree. Then all of the monitors reviewed (other than the Dell) have 1280x1024, which they specifically warn against.

    I know that most 19" LCDs are 1280x1024 but couldn't they at least have explained why this is?

    And actually, why is this?! I don't understand the popularity of 1280x1024 instead of 1280x960! IT DOES NOT MAKE ANY SENSE.
  • Googer - Tuesday, November 30, 2004 - link

    You will have to pry MY CRT from my cold dead hands before I let an LCD connect to my Graphics Card.
  • klah - Tuesday, November 30, 2004 - link

    "The TrTf response time is normally a pretty useless measurement - but it makes for an easy specification in which to market LCDs. "

    Why not provide us with a graphs of response times across the entire spectrum? There are at least 2 sites that do so now: X-bit and Tom's.



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