Display Analysis

Before getting into our typical display analysis, I wanted to address a question that I'm sure some people have. A quick examination of a Tab S2 8.0's subpixel arrangement confirms that the smaller model uses a PenTile subpixel arrangement, and there's significant artifacting on the edges of icons and text, with the issue being very pronounced with thin weighted fonts. This is a big disappointment for users who prefer small tablets, and I would almost hesitate to recommend the smaller model for that reason alone because of how prevalent the issue is.

While the smaller model of the Tab S2 uses diamond PenTile, the Tab S2 9.7" does use an RGB-like subpixel arrangement, and it's essentially the same as the one used on the original Tab S 10.5. In practice there aren't really any artifacts as a result of the subpixels not being lined up exactly like a conventional LCD display, and it looks every bit as sharp as the iPad Air 2 which is exactly what I had hoped for.

To test the various attributes of the Tab S2 9.7's display I've run it through out standard display workflow. All measurements are done with an X-Rite i1Pro 2 spectrophotometer, and in the case of LCD devices the contrast measurements are done with an i1Display Pro colorimeter. SpectraCal's CalMAN 5 software is used for measuring and collecting data, and for generating graphs that are relatively easy to understand.

Display - Max Brightness

The Average Picture Level (APL) of an image can be thought of as a percentage expressing the luminance relative to a 100% white display. Since AMOLED displays target a given power consumption but can save power by turning off black pixels they can push a higher maximum brightness when the display's APL is low. Above you can see how the maximum brightness of white scales with average picture level. Real world use cases tend to be somewhere around 80% APL, and while there are always exceptions, this trend has continued with Google's new guidelines for designing Material Design applications. What's important about this chart is it shows that in most scenarios the Tab S2 9.7 actually isn't any dimmer than a tablet like the iPad Air 2, and much brighter than the original Tab S.

As for contrast, there's no point in displaying a chart, as Samsung's AMOLED displays can simply shut off pixels and achieve infinite contrast and true blacks. There's really nothing that comes close on any LCD-based tablet, and the true blacks of AMOLED displays simply become even more stunning as you scale up from a phone to a tablet, and again from a tablet to a television.

Display - White Point

Display - Grayscale Accuracy

Samsung's AMOLED calibration has improved tremedously in recent years, and the Tab S2 9.7 is no exception. The greyscale has a very high level of accuracy, with very low errors across the board. When you move past 70% white there is a degree of green tinting to whites and greys that appears, and this is noticeable during general use. I did find it to be somewhat bothersome, but I think this is mostly due to the fact that I test and use many different devices regularly. If the Tab S2 9.7 was my only tablet I would be perfectly happy with the level of calibration, and I would get used to the good but not perfect calibration when shades approach 100% white.

Display - Saturation Accuracy

Saturation accuracy on the Tab S2 9.7 is phenomenal. It's better than every other tablet except for the Microsoft Surface 3, and at this point you would really be hard pressed to see errors in the rendering of pure primary and secondary colors. Most of the errors seem to be at the very extreme 100% saturations, and in daily use I never felt like the appearance of colors was off in any way.

Display - GMB Accuracy

In the Gretag-Macbeth ColorChecker test we again see a very high level of color accuracy on the Tab S2 9.7. The biggest contribution to errors are actually the grey shades that are tested, along with some slight errors in red and blue based color mixtures. To criticize these results would honestly be pedantry, as unless your tablet workflow involves editing videos and photos with absolutely no visible color errors the Tab S2 9.7 provides a more than sufficient level of accuracy.

There's really not much else to say about the Tab S2 9.7's display. Samsung has really done a great job with calibrating the displays on recent AMOLED devices, and the Tab S2 9.7 offers a display that is just as good as any other tablet. One could argue that the true blacks actually put the Tab S2 9.7 ahead of the competition, and I would be inclined to agree. My only complaint is that the iPad Air 2 with its AR coating tends to be a bit more usable outside and in other scenarios where there are heavy reflections. There's really no way to conclude which tablet offers the absolute best display, but I think it would be correct to say that in most cases the Tab S2 9.7's display is as good, if not better than any other tablet on the market.

System Performance Cont'd: GPU and NAND Camera and WiFi
Comments Locked

162 Comments

View All Comments

  • name99 - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    "You can't really notice a difference between its 5.6mm thickness and the 6.1mm thickness of the iPad Air 2, but the difference made by the lower mass is enormous."

    Really? The iPad Air 2 weighs 437 grams. The Tab S2 at 389g is about 10% less. I'm not doubting you, but that does not seem a small enough difference to justify the superlatives you are using.
    I guess we'll see how much of this is psychological when the Air 3 lands next Spring; I imagine it will be around 400g.
  • Tech_guy - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    Ouch. This review just shows Apple's dominance, especially in graphics and web scores. Samsung and Android have their work cut out for them. It's amazing how powerful A9 is in graphics. I mean dang.
  • beggerking@yahoo.com - Friday, October 16, 2015 - link

    they picked and chose benchmarks. notice it showed none of the mutil-cpu benchs?

    Anandtech is way biased now
  • Tech_guy - Saturday, October 17, 2015 - link

    The only multi-core benchmark is geekbench multi-core. Everything else just runs faster on iPhone 6s
  • Tech_guy - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    I can't imagine ever buying this thing over an iPad air 2. Samsung is not competitive in tablets anymore at all IMO. Plus iPad has always had MUCH better tablet apps. I think Android tablets will eventually die off, they need to.
  • Pramod - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    It seems, in galaxy s6, nexus 6 and lg g flex 2, diamond pentile displays have four sub pixels instead of two. Gsmarena suggests this and they have optical microscope images with a scale bar. Can anandtech take a look and confirm this (or debunk it)?
  • Pramod - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    And may be look at galaxy tab s2 display pixel arrangement too.
  • Pramod - Thursday, October 15, 2015 - link

    It seems that in newer amoled displays (nexus 6, galaxy s6, lg g flex 2, etc) the diamond pentile arrangement has 4 sub pixels instead of two. This was suggested by another review website. Can anandtech confirm this with microscope images with scalebar on galaxy tab s2?
  • edzieba - Friday, October 16, 2015 - link

    'Diamond' Pentile has a four-subpixel arrangement (RGBG), but LOGICALLY addresses only two subpixels per pixel. Or to put it another way, the green subpixels are at the logical resolution, but red and blue are at half that density.

    There is RGBW Pentile that adds in a White subpixel, but this is also logically addressed as two subpixels per pixel.
  • Pramod - Tuesday, October 27, 2015 - link

    No, the blue sub pixels are at twice the density and the red and green are at the advertised ppi.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now