Monday, December 11th 2017

Acer Intros PE320QK 32-inch Professional Monitor

Acer introduced the PE320QK (full model name PE320QK bmiipruzx), a 32-inch (31.5-inch viewing area) monitor for graphics professionals. This monitor boasts of 130% coverage of the sRGB palette, and 95% coverage of DCI-P3, and 4K-HDR. Key specifications of its IPS panel include 4K Ultra HD (3840 x 2160 pixels) resolution, 60 Hz refresh-rate, 4 ms (GTG) response time, 10bpc (1.07 billion colors), 178° viewing angles, 350 cd/m², and dynamic mega-contrast ratio. Its thin-bezel design benefits multi-monitor setups. Display inputs include two HDMI, and one DisplayPort. Available now, it is priced at USD $1,199.
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8 Comments on Acer Intros PE320QK 32-inch Professional Monitor

#1
bug
The limited (but quite adequate, imho) conectivity seems to suggest GSync. And not mentioning HDR10 means brightness is not really up to the task - but this is currently a problem for most panels.
Also the price seems a tad high, Acer isn't exactly known for high quality displays and for that kind of money you can get a Dell which has a better track record.
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#3
bug
Crustybeaver60Hz? meh
60Hz works fine for everything but a handful of fast-paced games.
Posted on Reply
#4
Vayra86
Fake HDR. Shame on you Acer. This is really just a fairly basic IPS panel.
Posted on Reply
#5
ZoneDymo
bug60Hz works fine for everything but a handful of fast-paced games.
yeah and so does a resolution of 1280x1024...
Does not mean we should not up our standards a move away from 60hz...
Its better for everything, even just browsing the internet to have a higher refresh rate, everything is smoother and nicer to look at.
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#6
Nephilim666
Vayra86Fake HDR. Shame on you Acer. This is really just a fairly basic IPS panel.
Really? Please show me the other fairly basic IPS panels in this price range with this colour gamut.
Posted on Reply
#7
Vayra86
Nephilim666Really? Please show me the other fairly basic IPS panels in this price range with this colour gamut.
They are still limited to low brightness and low static contrast. Quite essential for good, effective HDR. Every panel can oversaturate colors.

For professional work this is a fine panel, but for HDR it is not.
Posted on Reply
#8
Nephilim666
I understand, my point is that they aren't going after the bleeding edge HDR market, because at this stage that would likely require a VA panel and localised dimming of the backlight.
What they are offering is a reasonably bright (350nits isn't dull by any means) and high gamut (130% sRGB and 95% DCI-P3 is quite large) panel in a very usable size/res for multimedia professionals.
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