Color performance with correct white point without software calibration
Adjust the white point? Actually unnecessary! The CCT curve fits. I have now identified a real weakness regarding measurement. If you have already created an ICC profile with DisplayCal, a subsequent measurement (after resetting the monitor settings) can only be performed against the created profile. I need the Calman software willy-nilly. I’ll come back to why I need them later. Now let’s switch to the wide gamut mode.
Then the color space coverage looks like this:
There is something for every creator here, isn’t there? A 27-inch gaming monitor with 240 Hz, a 1440p resolution and at the same time this contrast for content creation, I find that quite impressive. Not many monitors can claim that. Because the measurement certifies the PG279QM a color space coverage of 82% Rec. 2020. Thus, the PG279QM belongs to the monitors with the largest color space coverage.
White point D65 (OSD Setting)
Gray Scale (calibrated via OSD @ D65/Gamma 2.2/200 Nits)
Hmm, now the white point is correct according to DisplayCal. But actually neither. This is because 6410 K is not 6504 K, so it is actually worse than factory-set. I now know why. Here, the deviation from the measured white point is set in relation to the “assumed” white point. This is basically not correct, because the target is D65 = 6500 Kelvin. In other words, I desperately need other software. But the good thing is that I treated all monitors the same, so the results still end up matching from before to after. The only difficult thing is the comparison of monitor A to monitor B. Which is why I have avoided this so far.
ColorChecker (calibrated via OSD only)
The PG279QM’s color performance was already extremely good out of the box, and that hasn’t changed much. Even a calibration via software does not change anything. I recommend for the professional users, create an AdobeRGB and a P3 ICC profile in the “wide gamut” mode of the PG279QM. But I’m sure you’ll do that without my advice. If you want sRGB only for a short time in the PG279QM’s broad spectrum, you can go into the OSD and switch from Racing to sRGB mode. Ready! Next page please…
- 1 - Einführung und Ausstattung
- 2 - Verarbbeitung und Features
- 3 - Messaufbau und Messmethode
- 4 - Pixel Response Times
- 5 - Variable Overdrive
- 6 - Display Latency
- 7 - Color Performance @ default settings
- 8 - Color Performance calibrated
- 9 - Calibration with DisplayCal
- 10 - HDR und subjektiver Eindruck
- 11 - Zusammenfassung und Fazit
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