Average customer rating: 3.5
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HP Pavilion F1903 19" LCD Monitor
Manufacturer: Hewlett Packard Product Group: CE Binding: Electronics ASIN: B0000DHI6A 2003-10-12 |
Amazon.com Product Description
A 19-inch TFT LCD from HP, the F1903 is a sleek and stylish monitor that delivers a high-quality image and a number of useful features. A 1,280 x 1,024 maximum resolution and 0.294 mm dot pitch combine with a 500:1 contrast ratio and 250 nits of brightness to provide detailed, true-to-life images suitable for a wide variety uses. The F1903 has a 130-degree horizontal viewing angle (120 degrees vertical), while the anti-glare, and anti-static screen treatment helps cut back on harmful reflections and the resulting eyestrain. The F1903 also comes with two Harmon/Kardon speakers, providing a stand-alone audio output. It connects to your computer via its analog D-sub or DVI-D digital port and has a fast 20 ms response time.With its small 16.6-by-8.5-inch footprint, the F1903 fits easily onto any convenient surface and is also wall mountable, freeing up desktop space completely. TCO '03 and Energy Star certified, the F1903 is a plug-and-play monitor, ready to use right out of the box. It weighs just 17.2 pounds. With the onscreen controls, you can adjust a wide variety of monitor settings including brightness, contrast, H/V position, H/V size, and color temperature. The AC 100 - 240V, 50 - 60Hz power supply consumes less than 40 W during normal operation, and less than 2 W in power save mode. PC and Mac compatible, the F1903 also comes backed with a three-year limited warranty.
<B>What's in the Box</B>
Monitor, detachable base, two Harmon/Kardon speakers, user's manual, power adapter and cable, monitor cable, warranty card
Product Description
If you're into multimedia, you'll want to consider this large (19" viewable area), flat-panel LCD's excellent features. Its sharp, antiglare presentation, height-adjustable base, and Harman/Kardon speakers (on select models) team up to provide you with a superb digital viewing experience. Enjoy superior viewing with the 1280 x 1024 resolution. Hear the fantastic sound emanating from the Harman/Kardon external speakers. Comfortably play games, watch DVDs, and edit photos using the height-adjustable, antiglare screen. Save space in your home or office with the slim design (about 8.5" deep). Get going fast with the easy plug-and-play installation. Conserve energy with this energy-star-compliant monitor. Get longer screen life than you would with a CRT monitor.Customer Reviews:
Wonderful monitor, great picture!.......2006-01-09
Bad, Bad, & Worse.......2005-07-18
Great design, but bad color cast.......2004-11-20
AWESOME Monitor!!!.......2004-11-12
Thoughtful design.......2004-07-13
Comparing models side-by-side in the store, I found that despite the f1903's reported contrast ratio of only 500:1, I found it consistently as bright if not brighter than others with higher reported contrast ratios. (I was sure to check all the brightness/contrast settings.) So I wonder what that number really means. The lesson here is to look at the screen for yourself.
The highest praise goes to the very adjustable base and stand. It will tilt and swivel and even raise up and down to find your comfortable viewing angle. I was surprised to find that the height adjustment actually acts like a spring tensioned to the weight of the monitor, so it only takes a simple lift or press of the frame to raise and lower it.
It ships with the brightness set to 100% and the contrast at only 50%, but actually that looks perfect for a dim environment. Raising the contrast to 75% will sufficiently blast your retinas, but beyond that I notice some color distortions at the bright end.
It also ships set to a color temperature of 6500K (warm/yellow), and also offers 9300K (cool/blue), but I found that a custom setting of RGB(50,50,55) looks best to me.
The on-screen control interface is very attractive, but still functional. Unlike some other models I tried, it doesn't take 2 minutes to adjust a value from 0 to 100%. It could benefit from some presets or memory settings though, so one could quickly adjust for viewing in bright areas, dark areas, movie viewing, etc. It offers a slick opacity setting that you can adjust to your liking, and you can also move the control area around the screen. I moved mine to the lower right corner so it's above the buttons on the bezel, which makes sense to me.
My model shows one stuck pixel that comes and goes. Not bad when the HP specs allow for up to 7 flaws. And this one's not even noticable except on a black screen.
The viewing angle is reported at 170 degrees horizontal, but that's hardly an exact property to be measured. I actually find that when I move more than 30 degrees off center, the image turns slightly yellow like an old newspaper and gets dimmer as the angle increases. I don't see any sort of cut-off around 170 degrees though.
Pixel response would have to be my biggest disappointment, but I should point out that I'm picky. When scrolling black text in a browser, it can turn slightly purple or blue. Certain color combinations are particular bad though, and I discovered this while playing Yahoo! Pool. A red or pink ball moving across a green background leaves a very noticeable trail. Upon seeing this, I tried viewing a DVD, and found that certain high-speed action such as the running of a horse's legs will get blurred and possibly change color. But I realize that LCD technology has yet to match the performance of a traditional CRT, and given that, this monitor doesn't do bad at all. I've seen much worse on laptop screens.
I also noticed that this particular LCD acts a little different than most when touched. Specifically, it leaves not just a dot where my finger pressed, but a dot with an X through it. This is neither good nor bad, but I just found it interesting. I'm curious what technology is at work behind that behavior.
I should note that I'm using the DVI connection and supplied DVI-D cable. (The box doesn't indicate that any DVI cable is included, but mine had one, so don't do like I did and buy one extra then have to return it.) However for analog connections, there are some very simple calibration tools to give you the best possible picture. And the "auto" button on the bezel is only for analog connections. (I tried to use the calibration and the auto button before I realized it wasn't necessary for digital connections.)
Overall I'm very satisfied, but it loses a star for the viewing angle and pixel response.
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