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HP LC3700N 37-inch LCD TVAsk a lighting designer what the three primary colors are, and he’ll answer red, green, and blue. Ask a printing professional the same question, and she’ll answer cyan, yellow, and magenta. Both answers are correct. The former refers to additive colors that when combined in proportion produce white. The latter refers to subtractive colors, which produce black (or an absence of color) when combined. Printing giant HP surely knows a thing or two about color science, and its recent foray into high-definition displays includes DLP rear-projection sets along with plasma and flat-panel LCD TVs. The largest of its LCD range, the LC3700N, is as feature-packed as any out there, and has a full suite of color management adjustments that go far beyond the standard color controls typically provided with other sets.
Within the picture control adjustments, we find choices for color temperature and settle on the Mid-Low setting, which most closely matches the 6,500-degree Kelvin ideal, deviating only slightly (within a few percent or so) over most of the visual range. Only with darker gray test patterns do we note a decided shift toward blue, but that seems endemic to the flat-panel LCD breed. One very useful feature is a picture brightness optimizer that senses ambient room lighting and adjusts output accordingly by varying the amount of screen backlighting. It works quite well, dropping the output from the nominal (and quite bright) 59 footlamberts to a much more pleasing 19 footlamberts in a darkened setting. HP obviously expects that some users might wish for an even brighter picture—turning up the screen backlighting to the highest setting provides us with an astonishingly bright 109 footlamberts, making the LC3700N by far the brightest set we’ve ever tested.After making minor adjustments to the basic controls using test patterns from the Avia and Video Essentials DVDs, we then examine the set’s basic colorimetry and find a very good, but not quite ideal, result. Blue and red renditions are excellent, while the green is somewhat off, producing a slight bias toward cyan. The set’s color management system provides a trio of six-axis hue, saturation, and value controls that will keep budding Botticellis busy for hours tweaking the picture to suit their fancy, but most users should be entirely satisfied once an installer has adjusted the basic controls properly.
With standard-definition sources such as DVD, the results are somewhat disappointing. Much signal processing occurs when standard-definition video is upconverted to the LCD panel’s native high-definition display rate and resolution. Here we note a number of anomalies, including more jagged edges that we’re used to seeing with recent high-definition sets, and quite noticeable edge enhancement, especially on sharp color transitions, and regardless of the sharpness setting. In particular, highly saturated reds suffer from the kind of streaking associated with the chroma upsampling error common to some progressive-scan DVD players, and we also observe an unusual variance in horizontal resolution with test patterns, something we have not seen before. While the LC3700N television does not impress us with standard-definition sources, it delivers a satisfyingly sharp and colorful picture—not to mention brightness galore—for those who will use it primarily as a high-definition television and/or computer monitor.DESCRIPTION DISPLAY CAPABILITIES RESOLUTION CONNECTIONS DIMENSIONS PRICE/CONTACT | |
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