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HP LP3065 review

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CNET Editors' Rating

3.5 stars Very good
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Review Date:

Average User Rating

3.5 stars 5 user reviews

The good: The HP LP3065's performance is great. It has fantastic color reproduction, high brightness, and a wide viewing angle. Also, it includes screen height adjustment and rotation.

The bad: The HP LP3065 has an expensive price tag and includes no video adjustment options aside from brightness. Also, for such a large monitor, HP's warranty is lackluster.

The bottom line: The HP LP3065 has stellar performance, but its lack of adjustment features and connection options makes its high price difficult to swallow.

As Reviewed: $1,300

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The most appealing selling point of the 30-inch HP LP3065 is its super-high 2,560x1,600 resolution. Gamers with powerful enough video cards to run at that resolution will not be disappointed. With its great color preproduction and wide viewing angles, movies also look great on the large display. Professional graphic artists will first have to make peace with the monitor's severe lack of adjustment options. Everyone else will have to make peace with its price. At $1,300, buyers should ask themselves, "Is what I want to do worth such a high price?" If the answer is yes and you can look past cost and don't require many video adjustment options, you'll have one of the best-performing monitors money can buy.

Editor's note: Previously, we mistakenly wrote that the LP3065 comes with only a one-year warranty, when in fact it includes a three-year warranty. We apologize for any confusion this may have caused. Still, some 30-inch monitors experience severe performance issues 9 months to a year after they've been in use. Be aware of this before you buy.

Design and features
The 30-inch HP LP3065 has a dark gray chassis with a matte finish, and features slightly rounded corners. The bezel measures 0.9 inch long on the left and right sides and 1 inch on the top and bottom. The panel is 1.8 inches deep; however, the back of the display, which houses the backlight, connection options, and ventilation system, extends another 1.25 inches out, bringing the full monitor depth to about 3.05 inches. The panel width measures 27.3 inches long--about average for a monitor of this screen size. The surface of the screen itself is a slightly frosted and smooth matte.

There's a groove in the back of the panel for carrying the monitor, but it feels too shallow and I couldn't fit my hands comfortably inside. (Given the LP3065's hefty, 30-pound weight, you probably won't be moving it around much anyway.) The rectangular footstand measures about 17.5 inches wide by 9 inches deep. As such, wobbling was minimal when we knocked the monitor from the sides, even when the monitor's height was at its maximum. With the screen height at its lowest, the distance from the bottom of the bezel to the desktop is 1.9 inches; at its highest, 5.9 inches.

The panel swivels 70 degrees left and right and tilts back about 25 degrees. Also, the panel can be unscrewed from the stand and then mounted (VESA-style) on the wall. The monitor doesn't include a pivoting feature for portrait mode, however.

HP includes three DVI ports as the only video connection options. There is no HDMI connection, which is a mainstay on most monitors, but its exclusion on the 30-incher isn't too surprising. Of the five 30-inch monitors I've reviewed, only one has included HDMI. Still, this is a 30-inch monitor that could easily carry out most functions a normal HDTV could. Hopefully HP will consider this with its next 30-inch model. Accessing the connections proved to be fairly easy, as they rest mostly to the right of the stand.

There's no On Screen Display (OSD) included with the LP3065. The only video adjustment option provided by HP is the brightness control. As such, even with such fantastic viewing angles and color reproduction (more on this later) we cannot recommend this to professional graphic artists who usually need precise control over color, contrast, in addition to brightness.

The HP LP3065's 16:10 aspect ratio has a 2,560x1,600-pixel native resolution. The 16:9 monitor trend currently sweeping the market has led to many smaller monitors adopting higher resolutions than they were capable of attaining at 16:10. A 22-incher with a 16:9 aspect ratio now has a potential high-definition, native resolution of 1,920x1,080 (1080p) pixels as opposed to 1,680x1,050. We understand that those buying the HP monitor would want to stick with their 16:10, 2,560x1,600 resolution, however.

Manufacturer's specs:
Resolution: 2,560x1,600
Pixel-response rate: 6ms
Contrast ratio: 1000:1
Brightness: 370cd/m2
Connectivity: DVIx3
HDCP compliant? Yes
Included video cables? DVI
Backlight type: CCFL
Panel type: S-IPS
Aspect Ratio: 16:10

Performance
We tested the HP LP3065 with its DVI connection. The display posted a composite score of 97 on CNET Labs' DisplayMate-based performance tests. The LP3065 scored excellently in nearly all of our color and uniformity tests. In particular, the LP3065 showed no signs of compression and the dark and light ends of the color scales tests. On our black screen test, we noticed only minimal backlight bleed-through along the top-middle edge of the screen.

The HP LP3065 achieved a brightness score of 302 candelas per square meter (cd/M2)--lower than HP's claimed 370 cd/m2 max. The HP's brightness was lower than we expected, yet you'd never know with the brightness adjusted to its maximum. You'll definitely want to dial the brightness down if you plan to do a lot of Excel or Word (or any white-screen program) work.

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Where to Buy

As Reviewed: $1,300

Check manufacturer's site for availability

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Quick Specifications

  • Release date11/4/06
  • Display Type LCD display / TFT active matrix
  • Diagonal Size 30 in - Widescreen
  • Display interface DVI
  • Max Resolution 2560 x 1600 / 60 Hz
  • EPEAT rating Silver
  • Dot pitch 0.25 mm
  • Aspect ratio 16:10
  • Contrast ratio 1000:1

Eric Franklin is a senior editor covering tablets and monitors. He's managed CNET's San Francisco testing lab the last 9 years and has written for CNET, covering everything from CPUs to games, for more than a decade. Full Bio

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