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I have the monitor. It does 60hz at 4k no problem.At 4k resolution does this do 60Hz or 30Hz? I saw a comment on another site this LG only does 30Hz when in single display of 4k
I have seen a couple of YT reviews of this monitor. It doesnt have HDR though correct?
You can have your PC running at 1080p and your blurry player running at 1080p, in side-by-side mode.Can i split the screen with two sources one running at 4k ( my PC) and one bluray player at 1080P ? side by side split.. thanks
You can have your PC running at 1080p and your blurry player running at 1080p, in side-by-side mode.
If you really want your PC showing you a full 4K, you could leave it taking up the whole screen at 4K, then have your blurry player at 1080p using picture-in-picture mode.
See my "Epic Review" at 34:47 to see me messing around with different options as such.
The VX4380-4K has a response time of 12ms according to their own website. While I haven't used that monitor at all, that would be horrible for gaming if that stat is accurate. Would probably create a good bit of ghosting.VX4380-4K
While it's true most "reviewers" only toy with a product for a couple hours (while reading a press release almost verbatim) before shipping it back, this is actually my main desktop monitor now. I use it for my Mac, Windows gaming rig, and consoles. As a geek I've used it quite heavily these past couple months, and have had no eye strain as long as I keep the brightness low at night, and half-bright by day. Seriously, most eye issues seem to be a result of almost everybody I meet cranking their brightness up to 100, all day, every day. Drives me nuts! Seriously, I'm an IT guy, so I see a LOT of monitors at work, and the first thing I do is turn down the user's brightness level by at least 50 points before I do anything else. My eyes, why must my users burn them?!?"There is a mention that it uses, as we already now PWM (but it seems it is not annoying at the calibrating settings with a frequency of 119 hz."
If the monitor is flickering at 119 Hz, it will be VERY ANNOYING, believe me. Especially after prolonged use. Do you think the reviewers have spent more than few hours in front of the monitor, so as to take their word as gospel?
The VX4380-4K has a response time of 12ms according to their own website. While I haven't used that monitor at all, that would be horrible for gaming if that stat is accurate. Would probably create a good bit of ghosting.
http://www.viewsonic.com/us/vx4380-4k.html
The LG 43UD79-B claims to have a response time of 5ms. The best an IPS monitor can have. That's over twice as good as the Viewsonic monitor when it comes to reducing ghosting in fast moving scenes. And from my experience gaming on this LG monitor, that seems accurate.
http://www.lg.com/us/monitors/lg-43UD79-B-4k-uhd-led-monitor
Still, if you're looking for the ultimate gaming monitor, for hardcore twitch action first person shooters, anything with a response time over 1ms, or a refresh rate under 120hz is out of the running. That being said, such monitors use TN screens which look horrible when it comes to colors. IPS screens like the two I mention above, are superior for everything except gaming. Still, if you're a really hardcore gamer, consider this TN display below. Complete with a low 1080p resolution so your GPU can push out four times more frames-per-second while gaming than it could for a 4K monitor:
https://www.amazon.com/Acer-Predato...506031280&sr=8-1&keywords=Acer+Predator+XB272
HDMI 2.0 and DP 1.2 both support 4K@60 Hz. Do you use the cable that came with the monitor? Check in the manual in case you missed something.
So, do you guys reccomend this for FPS TPS, casual gaming? or should i wait for the PHILIPS 436M6VBPAB ?