Date: Thu, 27 Aug 92 22:22:08 CDT From: Peter Newton Subject: Report for archive on Alternatives to Apple's 13 in color monitor Alternatives to Apple's 13 Inch Color Hi-Res Monitor Update: August 27, 1992 - Peter Newton - - newton@cs.utexas.edu - INTRODUCTION This article is about alternatives to the Apple 13 inch color hi-res monitor. The subject is interesting because there is a range of monitors available, some less expensive, some better, and most more flexible in that they can also be used with non-Mac systems. In fact, their primary market is PC users. I am not a monitor expert but I have spent hours looking over reviews, making phone calls and reading articles. I am motivated in part by some vague feelings of consumer activism. Mac users should be able to benefit from PC sales volume-- at least when buying monitors since many interoperate. However, most of the monitor companies have not attempted to target the Mac market-- even though their products need only a cable adapter to work with Macs. If Mac users start asking about their products, they will start paying attention-- so let's start asking! The Apple 13 is a very good monitor, but it was until recently badly overpriced. However, a recent Apple price cut has dropped its street price from near $670 to near $560. At this lower price, the Apple monitor is not unreasonable. It is of high quality and will be no fuss to install, but there are more flexible monitors of the same quality and price available. There are also inferior but usable monitors available for much less. Perhaps Apple's rumored low cost monitor will compete with these latter when it comes out. Please note that I am willing to update this document and keep it available by anonymous ftp to rascal.ics.utexas.edu. So please email corrections and additions to me. AUTOSYNC MONITORS: WHAT ARE THEY? The defining characteristic of autosync monitors is that they can automatically adapt to a variety of video signals. Hence, they can be used with more than one type of computer. Autosync monitors are often called "multisync" monitors. Be prepared to use this term when talking to salespeople. Autosync monitors are the primary alternatives to the Apple 13, but I will mention a few Apple 13 clones. For the purposes of this discussion, the key attributes of a video signal are its horizontal scan rate and its vertical scan rate. Autosync monitors are designed to work within a range of these rates. A typical monitor might have a vertical scan range of 50 to 90 Hz and a horizontal scan range of 30 to 36 KHz. When operating in the mode intended to drive the Apple 13 at 640 x 480 resolution, Macs put out a video signal with a vertical rate of 66.7 Hz and a horizontal rate of 35 KHz so this example monitor should work with them. However, there are other issues. Monitors also have maximum resolutions (number of pixels), and the number can vary depending on whether the monitor is used in interlaced or non-interlaced mode. (Interlace has to do with how the screen is painted by the scanning beam. Interlaced modes are bad since there is often flicker.) A monitor for use in place of the Apple 13 must be able to handle 640 x 480 resolution non-interlaced. I suspect that most can, but I have been told that there are a few monitors that operate only in interlaced mode. If you have a Quadra or powerful enough video card in a lesser Mac, you may be concerned about higher resolutions. Of course, you will probably also want a screen that is larger than 13 inches. Autosync monitors have some controls that are used to center images and stretch or shrink them to cover the whole screen. The range of these controls must be adequate for the Mac signal. Sometimes, it is not even close. MONITOR QUALITY There is a wide quality range in autosync monitors. Some are better than the Apple 13 without costing much more, and others equal it for near the same cost. Many are a little worse but still quite usable and cost $100 to $250 less. Some are very poor. But, all are more flexible since they can be used with computers other than Macs. This can be very significant to those who own more than one computer. Also, there is a larger market for used autosyncs. Monitor quality has a large subjective component. A friend compared them to stereo speakers. Different people like different things. For example I *hate* the Diamond Scan, but it gets good to OK reviews. I think it is a bad idea to buy a monitor without seeing it first, at least running windows on a PC. Stare at it for a few minutes. You do not want to spend hours looking at monitor that is bad. The result will be eye strain and tension. That's no bargain. Some people are also concerned about the health effects of monitor electromagnetic emissions. Recent versions of the Apple 13 are very good in this regard-- low emissions. The autosyncs vary widely. Some are labeled "low-emission." You also need to be *sure* the monitor works with the Mac. This can be a problem. There is a lot of confusion out there among dealers and consumers both. Some monitors are labeled with scan ranges but are *not* autosync. They work with only a few rates within the range. These may not work with a Mac. Magazine reviews can be mistaken. PC Magazine thinks that the Taxan 795 will not work with a Mac. Tell that to MacUser! ATTACHING AN AUTOSYNC TO A MAC Video cables or adapters can be a big problem for people who want a simple turn-key system. Few autosync monitors come with a Mac cable, and an adapter can be hard to find. Here in Austin, TX USA a local store (Computer City) sells VGA to Mac II cable adapters for $7. I would guess that this adapter will work with about 70% of the monitors available with appropriate scan ranges. Some monitors don't use the VGA PC de facto standard 15 pin connector. I do not believe that Computer City does mail order. Xceed (800) 642-7661 stocks a 9 pin adapter that can be used with The Sony CPD-1304. It's part number is MACC4 and price is $29.95, which is ridiculous. Maybe they have other adapters as well. Computer City stocks a different adapter for the LC and LC II. Most monitor makers will sell (at a high price) or give you an adapter, but this can be slow. It's a pity that something so stupid as a cable can cause a major hassle. This issue is serious enough that, unless you are enough of a hardware hacker to read a pinout diagram and make a cable, you might want to limit your purchases to outfits that will provide the correct cable. Ask them-- it can be a mess to deal with yourself. Do *you* know the difference between composite sync and and sync on green? Also, autosync monitors often have a large number of controls on them. Some are simple knobs that stretch and center the image. These are no problem to master. But some monitors have controls that select between alternatives such as digital or analog input (Macs use analog). You have to know the right settings, but most monitor's manuals do not discuss the Mac. If this makes you uncomfortabe, it's another reason to buy from an outfit that supports Mac users. This problem can be overstated. A very large number of monitors have no confusing controls. APPLE VIDEO PINOUT Apple Tech Note 144 defines the pinout of early Mac II video cards and the IIci's onboard video. The IIsi is the same, but the Quadra, the LC, and LC II are different. See below. TN-144 also provides explicit instructions for the cable adapter for the Sony CDP-1302 (I bet the 1304 is the same), the NEC MultiSync model JC-140IP3A, and the Taxan Super Vision 770. The pinout is as follows. Mac Video Pin Signal ------------- ------ 1,6,11,13,14 Ground 2 Red 3 Composite Sync 4 Monitor ID bit 1 5,12 Green (with Sync) 7 Monitor ID bit 2 9 Blue 10 Monitor ID bit 3 8,15 Not connected For emulating an Apple 13, pin 4 should be tied to ground, and pins 7 and 10 should not be connected. Just to be complete, here is the pinout from a typical autosync intended for the VGA market. Most with 15-pin "D" VGA connectors will be the same. Autosync Pin Signal ------------ ------ 1 Red 2 Green 3 Blue 4,5,9,10,11 Gnd 6 R Gnd 7 G Gnd 8 B Gnd 12,15 NC 13 Horiz Sync 14 Vert Sync Anyone want to comment on how to build an adapter? THE LC, THE LC II, and QUADRAS The LC, the LC II and especially the Quadras support a wider array of video standards than the IIsi and IIci. The difference in attaching monitors to these systems will be in the treatment of monitor ID bits. You can hook the monitors listed below to an LC or Quadra, but you have to fix the monitor ID bits correctly. See the Lab Notes section of the September 1992 issue of MacWorld for a discussion of Monitor ID bits. I do not not know much about the LC and LC II. According to Apple, they support "several" VGA monitors. One would think that this implies that they can produce video at the VGA scan rates (31.5 KHz horiz, 60 or 70 Hz vert). I do not know about this, but if true, it would open up a vast number of low cost non-autosync alternatives. Computer City in Austin sells a Mac LC to VGA cable adapter, but I do not know what it does in terms of monitor ID bits. Perhaps it sets them so as to elicit VGA scan rates. If anyone has the facts on the LCs, I'd like to hear about it. Beware of cheap VGA monitors. There are some very bad ones out there. In addition to a wide variety of Apple monitors, the Quadras support an array of industry standard video formats. These include VGA, SVGA, NTSC, and PAL. Dale Adams of Apple has prepared an excellent description of Quadra video. You can obtain it by anonymous ftp to rascal.ics.utexas.edu. Look in directory mac/misc-info_and_docs. REFERENCES See articles in August 1992 MacUser, July 1991 PC Magazine, May 15 1990 PC Magazine, March 1992 MacWorld, Apple Tech Note 144 (anonymous ftp to ftp.apple.com). The March 1992 issue of Computer Shopper has a huge list of monitors-- more than I am willing to type in, especially because Computer Shopper is error-prone. September 1992 MacWorld discusses monitor ID bits (Lab Notes section) as well as larger monitors. MONITORS THAT PROBABLY WORK WITH THE MAC What follows is a list of monitors that I have some reason to believe work with Macs as a replacement for the Apple 13. Be aware that I have not personally tried most of these on a Mac, and you will probably need a cable adapter. Information about them comes from magazine reviews or people on the net. If you know more, email me and I'll update the list. I want to leave in monitors that are no longer made in order to assist used equipment buyers. All monitors are in the 13-15 inch range unless otherwise noted. My intent is to survey monitors for use at 640 x 480 resolution, but most of these are capable of higher resolutions if connected correctly to the right video card or a Quadra. There are various reasons why I think these monitors will work with a Mac, but I never include a monitor in the list just because its specs suggest that it *ought* to work with a Mac. Monitors are in the list because they meet one or more of the following criteria. 1. Some magazine review said it works with a Mac. 2. Someone told me it works with a Mac. 3. I have seen a reference in print to the monitor working with a Mac. Of course, there could be mistakes-- especially in reviews in PC-oriented magazines since they do not actually test Macs. The entries marked with an "M" code were reviewed and tested by a Mac magazine. In truth, it is likely that most autosync monitors with appropriate scan ranges work in some fashion with the Mac-- even when their makers tell you otherwise! Is there some kind of conclusion what one can draw from all this data? Not really, but I have yet to hear a negative comment about the Sony CPD-1304. I found it, not in stock, at a local store for $589, and lots of mail order places will sell it for that. By all accounts, the Sony is at least as good as the Apple 13. But, good luck getting the cable adapter (Sony uses 9-pin). Just for grins, I called Sony's 800 number. The best they were able to do is give me the number of a local dealer, that happens to be PC-oriented. In the $400 and below price range, there is no consensus opinion, but several monitors do well in magazine tests (Relisys, Darius), although they end up rated below the Apple 13. The trouble with these monitors (other than the cable) is that they are hard to find-- especially to try before you buy, as I recommend. With mail order houses, inquire if they have a money back guarantee of satisfaction with no restocking fee. Also, use your power as a consumer. Call local Mac dealers and point out that $400 monitors that will work with Mac exist, and ask why they are not stocking them. Then, take your business to the PC shop down the street! I use codes in the monitor listings to save typing. They appear in brackets after the monitor's name. The first thing after the bracket is the date of the magazine review source I used. I use ??? when I have not seen a magazine review. When I refer to good reviews, I mean in the sense of price/performance. I have not included cost information since street prices vary widely and change rapidly. The interpretation of reviews is subjective and monitors that don't get a "+" should not be ignored. A middle-of-the-pack monitor purchased at a good price may serve very well indeed. M = reviewed by a Mac magazine. + = Got good reviews in magazines (averaging if multiple reviews). a = Mediocre magazine reviews. - = Got poor reviews in magazines (averaging if multiple reviews). ^ = Got good reviews from net people (averaging if multiple). o = Mediocre reports from net people. v = Got poor reviews from net people (averaging if multiple). $ = Has an unusually low street price. C = Might not be an autosync, but works with the Mac. B = MacUser says that a Mac adapter is included. Kudos. Amdek AM/738+ [1992,M,-,B] Amdek (800) 722-6335 50-90 vert, 31.5-38 horiz Darius TSM1431 [1992,M,+,$] Darius Technology, Inc. (206) 483-8889 Price/performance winner in MacUser's test of 14. 50-90 vert, 15.75-39 horiz Dell Ultrascan 15FS [???] - tested by me 8/1992. I personally tested this one on a IIsi using my little cable adapter from Computer City. I liked the Dell fairly well. The image was sharp and easy on the eyes, and it was easy to read 9 point times. On the negative side, one person in the room did not think the image was as bright as the Apple 13. I thought the brightness was adequate, but I tend to disklike glaring bright white backgrounds. Also, the horizontal size control did not have enough range to let the image quite fill the screen. It was close. Colors are a bit on the washed out side. Consider this an average review. This monitor is a little larger than most here. This drives its price up a little without much benefit. The Dell Ultrascan 14C is interesting and its specs suggest that it should work with the Mac, but I have no confirmation. E-Machines E-16 [1992,M,a] This is a 16 inch monitor of average quality that works at 640 x 480 as well as higher resolutions. It is far too expensive to be a reasonable choice for use at 640 x 480. Fora Addonics Mon-7C8A [1992,M,B,a] Fora, Inc. (408) 944-0393 45-90 vert, 30-57 horiz Generation Systems 14 inch color [???] Sold for use on Mac by MacWarehouse (800) 255-6227 and others. Mid-priced. I have no idea of its quality. Might not be an autosync. A person on the net says that the GS 14 is that same monitor as the Mirror 14, but sold at a higher price. Goldstar 1450 HG+ [???] Model number might be wrong. A person on the net said good things about this one, but others dislike GoldStar. There is a model called the 1450 Plus VGA that is *not* an autosync monitor but is supposed to work on a Mac. Hitachi/NSA 14MVX/LMF [1991,a] Iiyama Idek MF-5015A [1991,a] MacLand 14 [???,C] MacLand (800) 333-3353 (Direct mail-- call to order) MacLand says that this one is not an autosync. It is intended for use on Macs. 30 day money back satisfaction guarantee (confirm this). MacScan Ultra 14 [???,$] Orion Tech. MacLand sells this one for use on Mac. One of the cheapest I have seen. I have no idea of its quality. Sales rep says that it is an autosync. 47-89 vert, 30-40 horiz. MAG Colorview/15 [1991,+] PC Magazine editor's choice. MAG Computronic PMV14VC Plus [1990,+] PC Magazine editor's choice. Mag Innovision MX14S [1992,M,a] Mag Innovision (714) 827-3998 50-120 vert, 30-64 horiz Magnavox Mac Display 9CM080 [1992,M,+,C?] Not sure if this is an autosync. Mirror 14 [???,^,$] -- I called them in July 1992. Mirror (800) 654-5294 (direct mail-- call them to order) I spoke with Mirror on the phone and they were open about where and how they get these monitors-- much to their credit. They get monitors from Sampo, but they do not always get the same kind. They do not constrain Sampo on scan ranges. They will accept any range that works well on the Mac. Hence, you cannot be sure what the scan range of the Mirror 14 will be, but you can be sure that it will work with the Mac. I suspect this arrangement lets Mirror keep the cost down. The mirror 14 is inexpensive and they have a 30 day satisfaction guarantee with no restocking fee. (Confirm this.) A sales guy said that they *used* to get monitors from GoldStar. Mirror also sells a portrait grayscale monitor for $400, in case you are getting tired of thinking about color monitors at this point or want more screen space. No idea of its quality. Mitsubishi Diamond Scan 14 [1991,a] Mitsubishi Diamond Scan Pro 14 [1992,M,a] Mitsubishi (800) 843-2515 50-90 vert, 30-58 horiz Mitsubishi FA3415ATK [1990,+] NEC MultiSync JC-140IP3A [???] Definitely works with Mac. NEC MultiSync 3DS [1991,+] Replaced by model 3FGX? NEC MultiSync 3FGX [1992,M,a] NEC MultiSync 4FG [1992,M,+] NEC (708) 860-9500 55-90 vert, 27-57 horiz Quality winner in MacUser's test of 14 monitors. Nissei Sangyo Hitachi 15 MVX [1992,M,B,a] Nissei Sangyo America (617) 893-5700 50-100 vert, 30-58 horiz Panasonic PanaSync C1381 [1991,v] A person on the net said that he was unable to adjust the image size to fill the screen of this monitor without serious distortion. Very unhappy with it. Panasonic PanaSync C1395 [1992,M,a] Panasonic (800) 742-8086 50-90 vert, 30-57 horiz Came in 12th of 14 in MacUser's tests. Princeton Ultra 1400 [1992,M,-] Princeton Graphics (404) 644-1010 45-120 vert, 15-36.5 horiz Relisys RE-1420 [???,$] - tested by me 8/1992. I have tried this one on a IIsi using my cable adapter from Computer City. It is one of the most inexpensive monitors I have checked out, and it is a reasonable value. Text is sharp, and the screen is bright. There is however some pincushion and the image cannot be stretched enough horizontally to quite fill the screen. On the whole, I find this monitor to be of adequate quality despite its low cost. You might be able to get the 1420 for under $325. In Austin, Altex Electronics carries it (although at a price too high to interest out of town mail-order shoppers). 47-89 vert, 28-40 horiz. Has a tilt & swivel base. Relisys RE-1422 [1992,M,+,$] Relisys (408) 945-9000 47-89 vert, 28-50 horiz. Differences from 1420 include higher max non-interlaced resolution and wider horiz scan range. MacUser says that a cable adapter is free from Relisys upon request. Relisys says otherwise and suggests contacting BesTek / 10400 Rockley Road / Houston, TX 77099 / Mr. William King. Sampo Alphascan Plus KDM 1466A [1992,M,B,a] Sampo America (404) 449-6220 50-90 vert, 30-60 horiz Samtron SC428V [1992,M,B,a] Samtron Displays (310) 802-8425 50-90 vert, 31.5-35.5 horiz Seiko CM-1445 [1992,M,-] Easy to find but trailed the pack in MacWorld's test of 6. Sony CPD-1302 (old model) [1990,+,^] Definitely works with Mac. Sony CPD-1304 [1992,+,M] Sony (800) 352-7669 50-87 vert, 28-50 horiz Gets very good reviews from all sources. Replaced by 1304S. MacUser claims a street price that is far lower than I could find. Sony CPD-1304S [???,^] The 1304S replaces the 1304. I received a glowing endorsement on the net. Opinion was that this monitor is easily worth $100 more than the Apple 13 because it meets the Swedish CRT emission standards, has a tilt base, and has an anti-glare coating. The scan ranges are wider than the 1304's. This person also suggests buying from discount mail order houses with caution due to possible delays due to stock problems. Also beware gray market monitors without US warranties. Something to think about. TVM SuperSync [1990,-] Taxan Multivision 795 [1992,M,B,a] Taxan America (408) 946-3400 50-100 vert, 30-57 horiz Taxan Super Vision 770 [???] Definitely works with Mac. Viewsonic 5 [1991,^,a] Mediocre magazine review, despite good comments I have heard about the larger Viewsonics. I also heard from someone who uses the 5e version and is quite happy with it on the whole. Says the image is very stable. Only negatives are the limited control ranges-- Mac image could not quite be stretched to fill the screen. Wyse WY-670 [1991,a] ---- Peter Newton (newton@cs.utexas.edu)