Philips E-Line 237EQPH review
A 23in IPS monitor for under £150 looks like a bargain, but the dim backlight and fiddly touch-sensitive controls make it less impressive
Philips continues the trend towards mass-market IPS panels with its sub-£150 E-Line 237EQPH. It’s a 23in Full HD display with white LED backlighting, two HDMI inputs and a decent two-year collect-and-return warranty.
Philips markets the 237EQPH as an energy-saving screen, and its LED backlight certainly helps, drawing only 30W in use. In standby mode, it draws less than 0.5W. The downside is that the backlight seems underpowered, as it’s far too dim.
This caused problems when trying to adjust the controls to get the best image quality. We should first explain that the 237EQPH has a set of touch-sensitive buttons under the screen that act as shortcuts for image presets, as well as bringing up the main image settings menu. It’s not clear exactly where you should put your fingertip to activate a button as they’re incredibly insensitive, and we often had to tap continuously until something happened.
This is very frustrating. The main menu button, for example, first takes you to the Power Sensor control, and if you happen to tap twice when bringing up the menu, you risk changing this setting, which means you have to change it back and then exit out of that setting before you can actually make the changes you wanted to. The Power Sensor setting is turned on by default, and dims the screen to reduce power consumption when the screen detects you’re no longer sitting in front of it.
Thankfully, there’s also a Windows desktop utility, which not only duplicates the controls, but adds both a setup wizard and a colour calibrating utility. When initially calibrating the 237EQPH we found the image came out far too dark; in order to get more accurate colours, the calibration routine had to reduce the brightness. We remedied this by first running the separate wizard, which recommended increasing the Contrast setting from 50 to 72, increasing brightness dramatically.
The calibration tool relies on you dragging a grey square around so that it matches the grey background, which is made up of finely-spaced black and white lines. This made some difference to colour accuracy, but not a huge amount, and as the tool is incredibly slow to load calibration presets once you’ve created them it isn’t easy to compare before and after image quality.
Overall, the IPS panel’s image quality is much better than you’ll find on the average TN panel, with far deeper colours and improved viewing angles. It’s not as good as we’d expected from an IPS panel, however: the dim backlight is partly to blame, but black levels are also poor – night-time scenes in games weren’t convincingly dark, and the matt finish on the screen means colours are slightly dulled too.
We found the 237EQPH’s translucent plastic bezel a bit tacky, but the thin stand and glossy black rear casing are a bit more classy. The 237EQPH doesn’t have a VESA mount on the rear so it can’t be wall-mounted, and there aren’t any speakers. You do get a 3.5mm headphone socket, though.
Although colour reproduction is far better than on most budget TN panels, we were disappointed by the 237EQPH’s dim backlight, and its touch-sensitive controls are also a pain to use. It may give you IPS technology for under £150, but compared to the even cheaper AOC i2352Vh it seems like poor value.
Basic Specifications | |
---|---|
Rating | *** |
Physical | |
Viewable size | 23 in |
Native resolution | 1,920×1,080 |
Contrast ratio | 1,000:1 (20,000,000:1 dynamic) |
Brightness | 250cd/m² |
Horizontal viewing angle | 178° |
Vertical viewing angle | 178° |
Response time type | black-to-black |
Screen depth | 47mm |
Base (WxD) | 237x237mm |
Screen elevation | 119mm |
Features | |
Portrait mode | no |
Wall mount option | no |
Height adjustable | no |
Internal speakers | none |
Detachable cables | yes |
USB hub | none |
Integrated power supply | yes |
Kensington lock lug | yes |
Display extras | 2x HDMI |
VGA input | yes |
DVI input | no |
S-video input | no |
Component input | no |
Composite input | no |
HDCP support | yes |
Audio inputs | HDMI |
Environmental | |
Power consumption standby | 0W |
Power consumption on | 30W |
Buying Information | |
Price | £142 |
Supplier | http://www.pixmania.co.uk |
Details | www.philips.co.uk |
Warranty | two years collect and return |