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HP LC3040N review (30" LCD TV)

Inputs include one DVI, two component-video, two S-Video, two composite, one VGA for computers, one RF, five stereo audio RCA, and one stereo minijack coupled to the VGA video source. Outputs include one composite, one stereo audio RCA, one subwoofer, and one headphone minijack. All connections are located on the back of the panel except for headphone-out. The lack of HDMI is notable but, at this price, not totally unexpected. You can always connect an HDMI-to-DVD adapter or cable for HDMI sources.

Out of the box, tuned to the Movie preset and the Warm color temperature, and viewed through the DVI input, the color temperature was very blue in the darker end of the grayscale but gradually came close to the reference 6,500K in the brightest portions of the picture. The component inputs were a completely different story. Through those inputs, the HP LC3040N's color temperature was the worst we've seen from any LCD TV, measuring almost off the scale toward the blue end of the spectrum. Unfortunately, we were unable to access the service menu to conduct a proper calibration to correct this problem, but we don't expect many buyers to invest in such a service for a set in this price range. The color decoder showed noticeable red push, though primary colors were only slightly off, with reds somewhat orange.

Watching DVD through the component inputs, we saw clear evidence of the color imbalance; the color temperature gave a blue cast to everything. In addition, the HP LC3040N's lack of shadow detail meant that most of the detail in dark areas of the picture was lost. In chapter 2, "Cut the Rope!" from Vertical Limit, the shaded parts of the rock face that come into view as the camera zooms away from Chris O'Donnell and Robin Tunney plunge into noisy swaths of dark gray. On the plus side, the HP doesn't crush whites, so there was plenty of detail in the film's many snowy scenes. At the same time, we noticed more noise than average in both DVD and HDTV program material, regardless of input. High-def looked better than DVD, as we expected, but the lack of shadow detail and the overly blue color temperature still took their toll. 720p looked somewhat sharper than 1080i.

The price of the 30-inch HP LC3040N, in comparison to that of no-name 32-inch panels and some name-brand models, makes it doubly hard to recommend. If you're planning to watch only a single DVI source or you really like the all-black glossy styling, it might be worth the cost. But if you're going to watch more than one source or DVI isn't part of your system, you'll be better off with a budget set such as the Syntax Olevia LT32HV or a step-up model such as the Samsung LT-P326W. HP's new line of LCD TVs in 26-, 32-, and 37-inch sizes is available now, which may evince improved performance over this somewhat older 30-incher. We'll know more when we get one of the newer models to review.

Before color temp (30/80)8,700/6,900K Poor
After color tempN/A
Before grayscale variation+/- 1,228K Poor
After grayscale variationN/A
Overscan 3.25% Average
Color decoder error: red+10%Average
Color decoder error: green0%Good
DC restorationAll patterns stableGood
2:3 pull-down, 24fpsYGood
Defeatable edge enhancementNPoor

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