Samsung 32" SD850 WQHD Monitor with Vivo Stand
$215.99
$399.99
46% off
Reference Price
Condition: Factory Reconditioned
Screen Size: 32"
Top positive review
1 people found this helpful
Definition And Color Comparable to IPS
By Bates on Reviewed in the United States on March 11, 2016
Five stars mainly for the same feature which attracted me to begin with, the 1.4 HDMI port (this seems to be a secret with other makes), there is only one, so need a solution for PC/TV connection and apparently neither device I use can handle 2K , right now. (Later Note: I can get 2K 1440p @60hz with HDMI connection direct from computer to monitor, even with lowly AMD A8 7400 GPU Radeon R5, whatever; wow, I wish I could keep it but I want that port for my DVR. (But yes, the movement is sluggish in certain applications;, perhaps it is the 88.8 kHz.) (Achieved with USB 3.0 to DP converter) The ordeal was the Samsung comes set to auto port and on DVI; it kept floating an icon "check DVI", I learned to switch to "manual"and change display to HDMI. What a relief to see the "information" at bottom of main menu go to 1080P (from the DVI's 720x480P with a HDMI to DVI cable). Also a good feature for the screen to tell you what it's resolution is. Also, the picture, for some reason being the best 1080P I have ever seen, It may work together with the Magnavox HD DVR, used as a tuner. (using high speed HDMI cable) I also set the "upscaling" feature to "mode 2"'; I see an edging effect to it, Another worry for me was losing the color I really loved on my 27" IPS AOC; (The AOC had very dark blacks but also a generally dark screen perhaps being a cheaper model.) The colors themselves are mostly correct and the wide range of IPS, but washed out, without that great saturation, I am still working with "custom" settings; I don't like any of the color preset modes. IN ERR{The "dynamic contrast" setting might be better but it gave me a definite bad first impression. (Also, with each channel change, you see it reset.) It takes over all picture settings (even color???). } It definitely needs the Dynamic Contrast. I have just discovered I can keep custom color settings and I do not notice a reset with each channel change; I do not know what I am doing differently. (The reason for this error is that it depends on weather you are in the AV or PC setting for your particular input display, to the best of my knowledge. PC setting seems to blank out all other picture settings.) The 50/50/50 it arrives with is fairly perfect; You would have to be trying to mess up this color. I tried "Game Mode" for awhile and liked those saturated colors but too unreal in some settings. *This VA panel has great blacks; I thought that was a feature of IPS panels, (Some sources say not.) because the AOC also had great blacks, but also to the extent of bad visibility in dark scenes requiring its "DCB-Auto Detect" with some improvement.. This VA panel has very good visibility in dark scenes, (less in gamma 3). What is important about blacks in my experience is the way it adds highlights to objects and makes the colors stand out, but it will not take over all dark colors; shades of gray are there. I've discovered that Gamma 3 is used in "Dynamic Contrast" (The menu shows the settings in playback, sometimes???) and that is what improves the saturated color; it was the 100% bright and "cool" color mode in Dynamic Contrast that I did not like, so I only used the gamma 3 in my custom settings, with 100% contrast, much lower bright and set colors at varying levels all around 50%. I believe I've captured my old IPS. (Even though it has 8 bit color, combined with some process like dithering; some say 10 bit is not noticeable ). It claims 1B(billion) in the specs. The colors on this monitors really are great. (After comparing same picture on side by side screens, I see the VA panel will never totally achieve that IPS deep color look.) Response time is still 5 MS like AOC but I believe there is a setting for speed which I am not familiar with and probably don't need. The stand is nice and solid; Pivoting and tilt back is good for inserting cables; forward at about 5 degrees and pivoting at about 45 degrees is good for viewing. Also, I see volume control for audio and it has in and out holes; but the out gives a hum, unless I'm doing something wrong. (Even pass through should be outputting the audio from my HDMI.) LATER NOTE: Okay, I do now have audio from 3.5mm jack, but it was very difficult to push in.
Top critical review
11 people found this helpful
Mac Users Be Warned
By Ambrose on Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2017
I bought this with high hopes, remembering my old Apple Cinema display from 2008, which had the same resolution, although only 27". I liked the idea of having a larger screen, too. I am a software developer, so it helps to have the extra real estate. I got this today and set it up with my Late 2016 MacBook Pro, using the Apple USB-C Digital AV Multiport Adapter. (As an aside, I tried using their USB-C to Thunderbolt adapter with both the included DisplayPort to Thunderbolt adapter and my own HDMI to Thunderbolt adapter--chaining the adapters. It didn't work--never would display anything.) So I stopped by the Apple store to pick up their specific adapter, and after MacOS downloaded and installed an update, I got it working as desired. Now, on to the details. Pros - Very large display. Honestly, I think it's more than is needed. I recently had a 5K 27" iMac (at work), and I felt that thing was big. This is of course even bigger! But in a sense, it's not bad to have bigger. - Bright display, and the included Eco light sensor does okay with adapting to ambient lighting. - Colors, after some fiddling, are pretty good. - OSD is simple and relatively easy to use. - The mount is easy to adjust--up down, tilt, etc. - Did I mention BIG. I think I could get lost in this thing. Cons - On Mac, at least, the font rendering is not great. I think I've been spoiled by Retina displays, but I can see the rough edges and it's just not smooth and somewhat harder to read, even after tweaking with settings. This is the reason I will be returning this monitor--I look at mostly text for many, many hours a day/week. I don't need to make my eyes more tired. I suspect this will be less noticeable on a Windows machine because they typically don't have great font rendering anyways. - On Mac, the built-in USB hub does not work. It says so right there in the manual. (Yes, I do look at these things.) - On Mac, as noted, the included adapter did not seem to work. This may be because I had to chain it to a USB C adapter; I couldn't say. Needless to say, I am disappointed that I have to return it, but for a $400+ monitor, I need better font readability. I decided to go with the new Apple-approved LG UltraFine. Yes, it is like 2x as much, but it is Retina equivalent, so I am confident the font readability will be there. Unfortunately, there just aren't many 5K options. I don't particularly love the look of the LG...
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