LG L1980U LCD: The New 19" Panel on the Block
by Kristopher Kubicki on May 13, 2005 4:00 PM EST- Posted in
- Displays
Panel
Earlier, we alluded to the 12ms Gray to Gray, 16ms GTG LG.Philips LCD panel used in the LGE L1980U. For those interested, you can view a few of the more specific details about the panel on the LG.Philips LCD website. The LM190E04 panel used in this display advertises a 12ms (GTG) response time, 500:1 contrast ratio and 16.2M colors. This is one of the few panels from LG.Philips LCD that does not use their proprietary Super IPS display mode. The Twisted Nematic (TN) display mode is one of the most basic liquid crystal display modes. Panel manufacturers like AUO discovered several years ago that 6-bit TN displays were capable of faster response times due to the fact that fewer degrees of control were needed to control each sub pixel.The 16.2 million colors can be mildly misleading as this is not a true 8-bit (16.7 million color) LCD display. As a 6-bit display, the LM190E04 can only display 6-bits, or 64 degrees, of control when twisting the liquid crystal. Since there are three subpixels, this gives each whole pixel on the panel 262,144 possible hues. LG.Philips LCD attempts to replicate 16.2M colors by interpolating sub pixels that are near each other – this process is called Frame Rate Control or FRC. It works, but comparing an 8-bit LCD to a 6-bit LCD shows the difference in color depth immediately.
Our observations of the 500:1 contrast ratio seem about par with what other display companies are labeling as 500:1 contrast ratios. There is a clear difference when the monitor is placed next to a different Super IPS display with a higher contrast ratio; the LM190E04 seems almost inadequate in some instances.
When we compared the L190E04 with 19” 6-bit TN displays from AUO, the two displays were indistinguishable.
User Interface
LG definitely hit the nail on the head with regard to the interface on this display.The menu interface buttons and the power on/off buttons are pressure sensitive. The power button is actually nothing more than a perplexing clear acrylic tab hanging from the monitor. While the monitor won’t turn off (or turn on) by just casually bumping into this tab, the right brush of a finger is all the indication that the monitor needs to turn on. Apple isn’t the only one with an interesting control interface anymore.
The other four, multifunction, touch-sensitive interface buttons control the menu interface. Nothing about the menu itself screams innovation, but it is easy to use and allows for a well-balanced level of control.
Unfortunately, not everything is perfect and the DSP on the Flatron L1980U is no exception. Like most displays, when given an uncommonly boring signal (like a mostly black screen), the Auto Adjust functionality comes up short. Our display was cropped as much as 1/8 th of the screen size when the display was given an all black signal. For those who use terminal interfaces for programming and the like, you definitely want to stay away from the Auto Adjust function during periods with little text on the screen.
Samsung has pushed particularly hard over the last few years for a really killer panel management system, but after just a few minutes with LG’s forteManager, we knew that LG had a design win.
F-Engine is really nothing more than a collection of contrast, color and brightness presets; and we have seen this in the past from Dell and Samsung. However, f-Engine wooed us in a particular manner because it split screens the display while you are attempting to choose the optimal preset. The left half of the screen changes to the preset while the right half stays the previous preset. It’s almost like a display writer’s dream come true!
However, the real winner for the L1980U and forteManager is Auto Pivot. Pivoting a display is obviously nothing new, pretty much every display aside from a few entry level models have the ability to rotate the screen into portrait mode. We really haven’t recognized this feature too much in the past because it is awkward – pivoting the display, then enabling the pivot via software just doesn’t sound as friendly as it could be. LG’s Flatron actually recognizes when a pivot occurs and the display notifies PivotPro (via forteManager) to rotate the display. A window pops up via the DSP that notifies the user when the pivot has occurred.
The only drawback to pivoting this display is a semi-moot clearance issue that was also present on the Samsung 193P; there just isn’t enough room to rotate the panel without touching the monitor base. Thus, we need to actually tilt the display first before rotating, and that whole sequence of events can be slightly awkward. Furthermore, the Flatron L1980U does not rotate along the Z axis like most displays, so any sort of change in orientation required us to drag the display across the table.
21 Comments
View All Comments
ryanlun - Friday, May 13, 2005 - link
In Soviet Russia, cable manages YOU!!!!!