Samsung Announces TD5 Monitors: Aggressive, 1000R Curved Office Displays
by Anton Shilov on March 3, 2020 10:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Monitors
- Displays
- Samsung
- FreeSync
- Curved Display
- Adaptive-Sync
As one of the major proponents of curved displays, Samsung has been applying curved panels to numerous monitors over the years. Many of these monitors have been aimed at gamers and prosumers, while for other market segments, such as SOHO, Samsung hasn't approached them with the same zeal for rounded displays. Last week, however, the company changed that, revealing its new T55 monitors that feature an aggressive 1000R curvature along with TÜV Rhineland’s Eye Comfort certification for certain models.
With the monitor market already beyond saturation with traditional displays, the key selling point for Samsung's TD5 displays is of course the 1000R curve. With most monitors on the market using 1500R or 1800R curves, the TD5s have a noticeably narrower curve than other monitors. Citing a a clinical study conducted by professor Seong-Joon Kim at Seoul National University Hospital, Samsung is promoting the new curved displays as provoking less eye strain than flat monitors, as they bring the whole picture closer to the human eye. Furthermore, Samsung says, because the 1000R curvature radius closely matches the human field of view, this is a more optimal curvature than less aggressive options. To that end, 1000R curvature is the core feature of the whole Samsung T55 lineup.
Overall, the T55 family consists of three models: the C24T55, C27T55 and C32T55, which offer 24-inch, 27-inch, and 32-inch diagonals respectively. All the LCDs use a 1920×1080 VA panel that offers a max brightness of 250 nits brightness, a 3000:1 contrast ratio, 4 ms response time, and a 75 Hz maximum refresh rate. The LCDs can display 16.7 million of colors and reproduce 119% of the sRGB, 88% of the Adobe RGB, and 88% of the DCI-P3 color spaces, which is quite good given their positioning (and the fact that their rivals usually support only the sRGB gamut).
The monitors feature a minimalist ‘3-side borderless’ design with a fabric-textured backside and use stands with a 6-mm slim metal base that can only adjust tilt. As for connectivity, the monitors have a DisplayPort input, a D-Sub input, and an HDMI port to ensure compatibility with both modern and legacy PCs.
Designed primarily for productivity/office workloads, the monitors are not exactly meant for entertainment uses, but Samsung nevertheless equipped them with a scaler that supports VESA’s Adaptive-Sync (and AMD FreeSync) variable refresh rate technology and added speakers to 27-inch and 32-inch models.
General Specifications of Samsung's T55 Displays | |||
C24T55 24-inch |
C27T55 27-inch |
C32T55 32-inch |
|
Panel | 24" VA | 27" VA | 32" VA |
Native Resolution | 1920 × 1080 | ||
Maximum Refresh Rate | 75 Hz | ||
Response Time | 4 ms | ||
Brightness | 250 cd/m² | ||
Contrast | 3000:1 | ||
Backlighting | LED (?) | ||
Viewing Angles | 178°/178° horizontal/vertical | ||
Curvature | 1000R | ||
Aspect Ratio | 16:9 | ||
Color Gamut | sRGB: 119% AdobeRGB: 88% DCI-P3: 88% |
||
Dynamic Refresh Rate Tech | VESA Adaptive-Sync (AMD FreeSync) |
||
Pixel Pitch | 0.2767 mm² | 0.3113 mm² | 0.369 mm² |
Pixel Density | 91.8 PPI | 81.6 PPI | 68.8 PPI |
Inputs | DisplayPort D-Sub HDMI |
||
Audio | audio in audio out |
audio in audio out 5W stereo speakers |
|
USB Hub | - | - | - |
MSRP | ? | ? | ? |
While Samsung lists all three T55 monitors on its website, the company yet has to reveal their exact launch dates or prices.
Related Reading:
- Samsung’s Odyssey Continues: Ultra-Curved QLED 49-Inch 240 Hz HDR1000 Monitor w/ Adaptive Sync
- Philips Reveals 346B1C 34-Inch 100 Hz Curved UltraWide Monitor with USB-C Docking
- HP’s E344c: A 34-Inch Curved Ultra-Wide Productivity Monitor
- Samsung Unveils CJ79 & CJ89 Curved LCDs: Quantum Dots, TB3 & USB-C
Source: Samsung DisplaySolutions (via Tom’s Hardware)
66 Comments
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kliend - Tuesday, March 3, 2020 - link
At 1080p, the only viable option is the 24inch model. *yawn*DanNeely - Tuesday, March 3, 2020 - link
and 24" is laughably small for a curved panel. Not that 31" 16:9 is much better.💩Freeb!rd - Tuesday, March 3, 2020 - link
Maybe they want you to buy 3 of them and go Eyefinity (and beyond)CityBlue - Tuesday, March 3, 2020 - link
@Anandtech - have you ever thought about refusing to cover product announcements when the price is not known? It's only the most important spec item."This looks nice, I wonder if I can afford it?"
<scrolls down>
"Oh, so nobody has a frigging clue what it costs. How utterly pointless - forget it, then."
Beaver M. - Tuesday, March 3, 2020 - link
Well, at least they now tell you what panel is used. They didnt do that for a very long time.niva - Tuesday, March 3, 2020 - link
I agree with this. Why post advertisements when you don't even have a reasonable set of specs or price to publish to the viewers? Is this another revenue stream?s.yu - Tuesday, March 3, 2020 - link
Anandtech coverage is generally among the best, imagine what spec sheet you get from Engadget etc.Ryan Smith - Wednesday, March 4, 2020 - link
To be sure, this is not an advertisement, nor is it another revenue stream.Questor - Tuesday, March 3, 2020 - link
They are not reviewing or recommending the product. They are simply reporting its existence. If they post a review and fail to include pricing, then you have a fair complaint.CityBlue - Tuesday, March 3, 2020 - link
Nobody is forcing them to cover it. If the vendor can't provide pricing information, then don't cover it. It's not a hard concept to grasp, is it?