HDR performance
The HDR performance should have been improved by Philips by now. After all, the Monitors Unboxed review is over seven months old. It should be possible to at least improve the HDR performance in 1000 nits mode. Here we go…
NVIDIA HDR True Black 400
AMD HDR True Black 400
HDR True Black 400 AMD GPU (MK550T)
NVIDIA Game Mode (Peak Brightness 1000 Nits)
HDR 1000 Nits NVIDIA GPU (MK550T)
AMD Game Mode (Peak Brightness 1000 Nits)
HDR 1000 Nits AMD GPU (MK550T)
Interim conclusion HDR
The HDR True Black 400 mode is not perfect with either NVIDIA or AMD – but it’s perfectly fine. The other HDR settings all look equally bad. Whether HDR Game, Movie or Vivid – the HDR Gray Scale Tracking is completely out of control here. This leads to high delta error values and, in particular, to the HDR image becoming far too bright. However, this does not mean that the 34M2C8600 is not an HDR monitor, on the contrary. If you don’t care about color accuracy, then the HDR picture next to an IPS monitor – with HDR 400 blur certification – will simply blow you away!
- 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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