1800R vs 1500R: two mild curves, one you can actually notice
The original mild curvature vs the modern mainstream default — and where the extra 300 mm of tightness shows up.
1800R defined the first wave of curved monitors; 1500R is the default on most mid-range ultrawides in 2026. Geometrically they're close neighbours — 1.8 m vs 1.5 m ideal viewing distance — and both sit in "barely-there curve" territory at a normal desk setup. The step from 1800R to 1500R is the first time the wrap becomes consistently noticeable rather than just measurable. On a 34" ultrawide the difference is real; on a 27" panel it's marginal at best.
Try this comparison with our tools
See the curves side-by-side
Both rendered as a 34" 21:9 ultrawide, top-down view.
Side-by-side specs
| Spec | 1800R | 1500R |
|---|---|---|
| Curvature radius | 1800 mm (1.8 m) | 1500 mm (1.5 m) |
| Ideal viewing distance | ~71 in (1.8 m) | ~59 in (1.5 m) (better on this spec) |
| Match for desk use (60-75 cm) | Loose match | Closer match (better on this spec) |
| Visible curve at a glance? | Barely | Subtle but present |
| Immersion on 27" | Imperceptible | Barely noticeable |
| Immersion on 34" ultrawide | Mild | Slightly more wrap (better on this spec) |
| Off-axis distortion | Minimal | Minimal |
| Straight-line accuracy | Near-perfect | Near-perfect |
| Productivity (text-heavy) | Excellent | Excellent |
| Availability (2026) | Common on budget / legacy | Mainstream default (better on this spec) |
| Typical price difference | Cheaper or equal (better on this spec) | +$0-40 |
| Good for single-user gaming | Good | Marginally better (better on this spec) |
How they differ
1800R asks for 1.8 m of viewing distance to be geometrically correct; 1500R asks for 1.5 m. At desk range (60-80 cm) both are under-matched, but 1500R is the closer fit — its edges lean slightly further toward the viewer, producing a faint but more-consistently-noticed wrap. The practical effect shows up mostly on wider panels: 34" ultrawides benefit from 1500R's tighter radius because the screen width finally gives the curve something to do. On 27" panels either curvature is essentially invisible at arm's length. Neither interferes meaningfully with productivity, text, or off-axis viewing — this is a "marginally more immersive" pairing, not a trade-off comparison.
Verdict
On 32-34" panels, 1500R is the better-tuned default and a small upgrade worth having if available at similar pricing. On 27" panels or for budget-conscious buys, 1800R is indistinguishable in daily use and often cheaper. Neither compromises productivity meaningfully. If you've tried one and didn't feel anything, the other won't change your mind.
Visualise 1800R vs 1500RWhich should you pick?
Choose 1800R
Pick 1800R when it's cheaper or more readily available, for 27" panels where either curve is imperceptible, or if you explicitly prefer the "just barely curved" look.
See a 34" ultrawide at 1440pChoose 1500R
Pick 1500R for 32-34" single-user ultrawides where the slightly tighter wrap is worth a small premium, or if you want the modern mainstream curve that most 2026 panels ship with.
See a 34" ultrawide at 1440pRelated comparisons
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