Grayscale, color fidelity, saturation and gamut to factory settings
As is typical for LG, the measurements in default mode (player 1) don’t exactly look like D65 and sRGB. You have to like the blue cast that you get directly on the eye. Why LG does it this way is beyond me. Fortunately, LG has included a pre-calibrated sRGB mode in the OSD.
Color space coverage
How could it be otherwise, you get DCI-P3 and sRGB in abundance. LG still has 90 percent left for the Adobe RGB color space. At this point a hint. If you read/hear from other media that an LG WOLED panel is capable of 97% Adobe RGB, then I would ask: Is there any proof of measurements?
Gray Scale, Saturation, ColorChecker @ Default Setting
Here is the proof for the quite bad default performance of the LG 45GR95QE.
Gamut, Gray Scale, Saturation, ColorChecker @ sRGB Mode
What you can’t do by default, the sRGB mode has to fix. LG can deliver here, even if the result is not “Outstanding Performance”. For a gaming monitor, this is completely acceptable from my point of view.
On the next page, the default performance of the LG 45GR95QE comes in last. What’s new is that I can show you the power consumption. And an OLED is certainly not an energy-saving fox.
- 1 - Introduction, Features and Specs
- 2 - Workmanship and Details
- 3 - How we measure: Equipment and Methods
- 4 - Pixel Response Times
- 5 - Display Latencies
- 6 - Color-Performance @ Default Settings
- 7 - Direct Comparison and Power Consumption
- 8 - Color-Performance calibrated
- 9 - HDR-Performance
- 10 - Summary and Conclusion
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