Color performance after a full software calibration
Today this is quite quick, as the 34M2C8600 does not allow any manual adjustments in terms of RGB control in the OSD. Only software can help, an ICC profile has to do the job. So Calman Ultimate and the UPRtek MK550T.
OSD Setting D65 @ 200 Nits (OSD Default Settings) and full calibration with Calman Ultimate
You only have to set the brightness to 83, then you will get the approx. 200 nits with a 100 percent window (white). Please do not change the other settings.
ColorPerformance Philips QD-OLED calibrated
Spectral distribution and “Eye-Safe”
Typical for QD-OLED, we find a very differentiated spectral light distribution. Red, green and blue in particular stand out. This is one of the reasons why QD-OLED scores significantly better than WOLED in terms of color brightness and color volume.
Spectral distribution @ D65, 200 nits (100% white window)
The image should also be familiar, as all QD OLEDs look roughly the same. Blue peaks at approx. 455 mn. I’ll leave out the standard sentence on the subject of “eye-safe” today.
Uniformity
You are already familiar with the first-generation Samsung QD OLED panel, which we already had in the Odyssey OLED G8, among others. The picture uniformity is also excellent on the 34M2C8600.
Image errors and other issues
Apart from the fact that, once again, you can’t change HDR settings with VRR enabled on an AMD GPU, I didn’t notice any problems. So if you have an AMD graphics card, you have to deactivate Adaptive Sync in the OSD, then set HDR and then reactivate Adaptive Sync. We already know this from the PG32UCDM. And, my colleague Tim already pointed out in his video (seven months ago) that the 34M2C8600 has exactly the same problem.
Sound reproduction
The 34M2C8600 can reproduce sound both via the built-in speakers and via the jack. Of course, you shouldn’t expect cinema quality from the speakers.
Webcam and microphone
Are not installed. This brings us to the topic of HDR.
- 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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