Set atop its stand with speakers attached, the Dell W3706MC measures 42.2 by 25.1 by 10 inches (WHD) and weighs 61.7 pounds. Remove the speakers and it shrinks to 35.8 inches wide; take off the stand and the bare panel measures 35.8 by 21.8 by 4.5 inches--extremely compact for a 37-inch LCD.
Dell's remote is a small, sleek design with white lettering on an all-black background. Smart-looking silver trim borders the left, right, and bottom edges. Any button-press calls up cool blue illumination behind most of the keys. We didn't appreciate having to remember to use the second, topside cursor control to navigate the menu system, and we would've liked the clicker to command other gear as well.
The internal menu system, while straightforward enough, is a bit awkward to use. The main menu runs horizontally across the bottom of the screen, but selecting options calls up a vertically aligned submenu in the top portion, making navigation somewhat counterintuitive. Like most flat-panel LCD-based HDTVs on the market, the Dell W3706MC has a native resolution of 1,366x768 pixels. That's enough to display every detail of 720p HDTV sources. All incoming resolutions and sources, from HDTV to DVD to computer to standard TV, are converted to fit the pixels.
The Dell has a solid feature package otherwise, with some desirable convenience features such as PIP (picture-in-picture), POP (picture-out-of-picture), and one we've never heard of: PBP (picture-by-picture). The PIP feature actually works with HDTV and computer video, as well as with SD content, which is a nice bonus. A built-in ATSC tuner for off-air HDTV channel reception, as well as a QAM cable tuner (but no CableCard) are also on board. All five of the Dell's aspect-ratio choices are available with HD and SD sources.
Selectable color temperatures of Blue, Red, Natural, and Normal are available, with Normal being the closest to the broadcast standard. Picture modes include Movies, Sports, Weak Signal, Multimedia, and Personal, which remains different for each input and is the only one that allows you to customize the picture. It's funny that the preset modes tease you with picture levels and settings, even though you can't change them. Unlike some LCDs we've seen, the W3706MC doesn't let you adjust the intensity of the backlight.
The inclusion of two HDMI inputs on the Dell W3706MC gained it a full point in features, because so much of the competition, even at much higher price points, offers only one. Including the HDMIs, the set has a whopping thirteen A/V inputs: two component-video inputs, two S-Video, two composite, and two RF inputs are available, along with a 15-pin VGA input for PC hookup (1,366x768 recommended resolution). Two more video inputs--composite and S-Video, which share a single set of audio jacks--are located on the left side of the panel. There's also an RS-232 control port for programming purposes. We were pleasantly surprised by the Dell W3706MC's performance--it does a lot right for an LCD. Color is fairly accurate overall. Color decoding was impressive with no red push, although the primary colors didn't come as close to the specification as some LCDs we've tested recently. Color temperature was also accurate out of the box, resulting in fairly neutral grays when we selected the Normal mode (see the Geek box for more).
Although the video processing does have 2:3 pull-down, as evidenced by the opening sequence of the Star Trek: Insurrection DVD, we did notice a bit more noise than usual here.
The inability to achieve a convincing level of black is the Dell W3706MC's biggest weakness, which comes as no great surprise since it is a shortcoming with most LCD flat-panels. We did miss having an adjustable backlight, which would allow us to lower the amplitude of the lamps driving the display. As a result, dark scenes lacked the depth and richness of some LCD panels with this backlight technology, but we did appreciate how clean and artifact-free dark material looked.
For a black-level test, we watched the first two chapters of the E.T. DVD with the night scenes and the opening shot of a star-filled sky. Blacks were stable and quiet, if relatively light in depth and texture. The Fifth Element, a classic reference-quality DVD transfer, exhibited excellent color saturation and detail. Skin tones looked exceptionally natural for an LCD panel. Bright scenes, such as chapters 7, 8, and 9, had real snap to the picture, indicating good contrast ratio.
HD looked really good, especially with bright material, although dark concert footage from HDNet did suffer from a lack of shadow detail. Both the component and HDMI inputs passed all the resolution from a 720p HD test signal, which is not something all sets can claim.
Comparing it directly to a 42-inch Vizio P42HDTV plasma, which has a resolution of 1,024x768, the Dell held its own as long as we sat directly facing the center of the screen. As with all LCD screens we've seen, the Dell's image became more discolored and washed out the further we moved off-axis--especially higher or lower than dead-center--which isn't an issue with plasma.
The Good
Excellent color decoding; independent memory per input; comprehensive connectivity, including two HDMI inputs and a PC input; detachable speakers.
The Bad
Somewhat expensive; relatively unimpressive black-level performance and shadow detail; no backlight control.
The Bottom Line
Despite its relatively light blacks, the Dell W3706MC has a decent picture, and its jack pack and versatile speakers sweeten the deal.
Geek box
| TEST | RESULT | SCORE |
| Before color temp (20/80) | 7,100/6,125K | Good |
| After color temp | 7,525/6,550K | Average |
| Before grayscale variation | ± 319K | Good |
| After grayscale variation | ± 236K | Average |
| Color of red (x/y) | 0.604/0.330 | Poor |
| Color of green | 0.284/0.554 | Average |
| Color of blue | 0.155/0.077 | Average |
| Overscan | 2.5 percent | Good |
| Black-level retention | All patterns stable | Good |
| 2:3 pull-down, 24fps | Yes | Good |
| Defeatable edge enhancement | Yes | Good |