Samsung SyncMaster 226BW
David Bayon
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Jun 1, 2007 11:26 AM
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Samsung | http://www.samsung.com/au
RRP: $531 (time of review)
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Sleek, stylish and wonderfully vibrant in use, this is the best of the 22in LCDs we’ve seen.
Samsung’s first 22in LCD, the SyncMaster 225BW, was best described as functional, eschewing elegant design for a plain grey exterior and a height-adjustable stand. Its image quality was pretty good, though, so full marks to Samsung for following it up with the 226BW just months later.
The 226BW is clearly aimed at home users, with its glossy black bezel and blue-backlit power button. But rather than the software-only approach to image adjustment of some of its previous consumer LCDs, this time Samsung has included physical control buttons on the underside, with labels etched into the silver bar beneath the screen.
This makes the initial setup easy, especially as the only tweak we needed to make was a slight reduction in the red level. In our DisplayMate tests, we found the 226BW to have an impressive and uniform white level, with the backlight giving a maximum brightness of 300cd/m2 – but more important is the fantastically deep black level.
We saw no light bleed at the edges of the screen, and the 1000:1 contrast ratio means colours were vibrant and the level of detail was high in our test videos, with no blurring or ghosting thanks to the 2ms response time. Greys were tinged with blue, but the colour-blending tests showed smooth gradients.
Samsung makes much of its Dynamic Contrast feature. It offers a theoretical 3000:1 ratio when enabled by altering the intensity of the backlight on-the-fly, but the constant shifts soon get irritating during movies. Without it, the picture quality is impressive enough.
The 226BW is HDCP compliant over the DVI connection, and it sensibly does away with integrated speakers. The stand isn’t very adjustable, but the screen sits at a comfortable height from the base.
At $543, there are cheaper 22in LCDs, but the SyncMaster 226BW compares well with the Dell E228WFP at $549. The Dell can’t match the Samsung for vibrancy or value, so the 226BW moves onto the A-List.
This article appeared in the
June, 2007 issue of PC Authority.