Any good recommendations for these?
I'm hanging onto a couple of Samsung Syncmaster 204B's but one of them's dying. Would be nice to replace it with something that's not equally old.
Mostly, buy them used. e.g. a 19" 1280x1024 by eizo for example can easily cost 300 bucks new, if you can even find a seller. They're usually not marketed to normal consumers at all (you can find info via googling though) and usually are sold in contracts. When a business then closes down or upgrades, they not rarely land on eBay where they're often basically gifted away because nobody knows or wants them, they're not excessively amazing screens but you can get them pretty cheap. As I said, these are not gamer monitors so you won't find anything over 60 Hz.
On the upside, their general build quality is normally superior to the consumer stuff. You usually get physical buttons (not that touch finger nonsense) proper casing with proper bezels that don't feel flimsy, good backlighting without unevenness or excessive bleeding, poor color calibration and other such quality problems and often small extras like an additional physical switch that actually cuts power, light/people sensors and inbuilt speakers. (which usually are bad) And the weirdo form factors like 5:4 and 16:10 which disappeared from the consumer market.
Japan-based Eizo is the Mercedes amongst these brands, then comes Dell, Asus, Fujitsu-Siemens and the like. Avoid chinese Eyoyo, pure garbage. Features can vary a bit, from what I seen it's usually Asus that has the most Consumer-friendly stuff in their business lineup like additional color modes for movie watching if you care about these things. Buy something with an LED backlight and then how used they are doesn't really matter as that backlight will probably outlive you. Pretty much check eBay for your wish resolution, and then google how old the offered screens are and what their features are. I'd not buy anything with CCFL backlight as used screens are probably half dead already. You'll probably not find 1600x1200 in a new screen as such panels are not made anymore but 1920x1200 and 1280x1024 should be plentiful for less than hundred or sometimes even less than fifty dollars.
If you are really attached to an old CCFL monitor that's half dead, you could attempt "upgrading" it to an LED backlight. There are tutorials and kits. It's not for the novice though and soldering is required.
68k Macs are another group of retro computers I enjoy.
I've never had any contact with them in the 90s but bought some 040 based Mac out of curiosity just a few years ago and fell in love. It's a very well thought out machine and the OS is comfy. Software selection is a bit meh though.