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Performance The OSD includes five preset modes including Standard, Movie, RGB, Dynamics, and Photo, all accessible from the side panel buttons. The OSD is simply designed but it’s not a breeze to navigate; a tad slow to respond. The standard preset is the best, though still a little calibration is required. We started with grayscale measurements - deep blacks (0-20 IRE) were a bit blotchy, otherwise higher up towards pure whites the monitor performs quite decently. On our 256 band grayscale the darker black bars seemed to merge up, thus proving lesser detail in blacks. The entire luminance stays at around 6500K, except low IRE levels. The brightness is of high quality though, thus we can get a decent contrast with a little tweaking. Colors actually impressed quite a bit, there is hardly any over saturation. No extra saturated blues, red levels etc. It’s not bang on accurate, such that a pro can use, but fits the bill for HD movies and modern games. I played Prince of Persia and watched Ratatouille on the E2400HD. Just like its predecessor V2400W, the Viewing angles did deteriorate before 160 degrees, contrast started to get weaker. Another good point is that this model did not have any real issues of Back light bleed, visible as a patchiness around the corners. The screen itself is hardly reflective; it’s a nice matte screen. |
Tags: BenQ , Full HD Monitors , 16:9
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