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I am thinking of getting an Asus PA248QJ. I have not found any detailed reviews of the PA248QJ, but there is quite a lot about the PA248Q, which from the specifications looks identical in terms of the screen attributes (the differences seem to be the hood and included calibrator with the PA248QJ).
I had been thinking that I would use the screen in sRGB mode. However, the User Manual for the PA248Q (page 3-2) says you can only adjust the brightness in sRGB mode. Does that mean that you can't recalibrate the sRGB mode with a hardware calibrator, or does a hardware calibrator adjust things under the surface that are not accessible through the menus?
If you can only use the calibrator on the (adjustable) User Modes, and since screen attributes "drift" over time, presumably this would make the sRGB mode unreliable for longer term use, even if it started out close to the standard?
.............
I'm also puzzled about the practicalities of calibrating a screen with a hardware calibrator. I had thought that this was a pretty mechanical/automated process, with the calibrator's software making all the necessary adjustments to the screen and/or the screen profile.
However, this article at CNET Australia says of the PA246 "No doubt with a lot more time and patience, you could get a lot better results Asus definitely gives you the tools in the OSD to do so. With so many variables, though, we found ourselves wishing for an automated solution, as per NEC's ability to plug a custom i1Display into the monitor directly and adjust that way."
And Expert Reviews claim here that after calibration the PA248Q they had for review only reached 93% of sRGB coverage according to their Spyder 4 Express calibrator.
So to get an automated solution that produces top notch results, do I have to spend ? 2 or 3 times as much on an NEC or ? something else with similar capabilities?
.............
The more reviews I read the less straightforward the concept of "close to the standard" becomes, and the more questions arise about how well/completely any particular screen model meets the standard and the amount of variation between screens of the same model. For example, this is about the Asus PA246Q, but it gives the flavour of things I have been reading. Presumably this sort of consideration doesn't apply just to Asus screens.
I suppose with all these things it comes down eventually to buying something and seeing if it works for you. I have certainly read a lot of enthusiastic user comments about these Asus screens.
I had been thinking that I would use the screen in sRGB mode. However, the User Manual for the PA248Q (page 3-2) says you can only adjust the brightness in sRGB mode. Does that mean that you can't recalibrate the sRGB mode with a hardware calibrator, or does a hardware calibrator adjust things under the surface that are not accessible through the menus?
If you can only use the calibrator on the (adjustable) User Modes, and since screen attributes "drift" over time, presumably this would make the sRGB mode unreliable for longer term use, even if it started out close to the standard?
.............
I'm also puzzled about the practicalities of calibrating a screen with a hardware calibrator. I had thought that this was a pretty mechanical/automated process, with the calibrator's software making all the necessary adjustments to the screen and/or the screen profile.
However, this article at CNET Australia says of the PA246 "No doubt with a lot more time and patience, you could get a lot better results Asus definitely gives you the tools in the OSD to do so. With so many variables, though, we found ourselves wishing for an automated solution, as per NEC's ability to plug a custom i1Display into the monitor directly and adjust that way."
And Expert Reviews claim here that after calibration the PA248Q they had for review only reached 93% of sRGB coverage according to their Spyder 4 Express calibrator.
So to get an automated solution that produces top notch results, do I have to spend ? 2 or 3 times as much on an NEC or ? something else with similar capabilities?
.............
The more reviews I read the less straightforward the concept of "close to the standard" becomes, and the more questions arise about how well/completely any particular screen model meets the standard and the amount of variation between screens of the same model. For example, this is about the Asus PA246Q, but it gives the flavour of things I have been reading. Presumably this sort of consideration doesn't apply just to Asus screens.
I suppose with all these things it comes down eventually to buying something and seeing if it works for you. I have certainly read a lot of enthusiastic user comments about these Asus screens.
