TechLife Australia

BenQ PD2700U

A NO-NONSENSE 4K MONITOR WITH A QUALITY IPS PANEL.

- [ JEREMY LAIRD ]

IN THIS AGE of zany ultra-wide PC monitors, mega-bright HDR monitors, adaptive-sync monitors, super-high refresh monitors, even monitors with nanotechno­logy-enhanced backlights, is there any appetite left for a convention­al monitor aimed at what you might call serious computing that does the basics right? In short, does anyone care about panels designed for plain old productivi­ty any longer?

If your answer is yes, BenQ’s new PD2700U is definitely worth a look. It conspicuou­sly lacks any of the aforementi­oned whizz-bang features. Instead, its appeal is based around a high quality 27-inch IPS LCD panel, full 4K resolution and properly engineered control electronic­s.

In other words, the new BenQ’s propositio­n involves plenty of pixels and accurate colors, but not 144Hz refresh, quantum dots or local dimming.

More to the point, it’s exactly that trade off between a high quality panel with relatively few frills on the one hand, and all those bells and whistles on the other, that you have to make at this price point. If you want it all in a single monitor, you’ll be spending around three times the money.

DESIGN AND FEATURES

If it’s pure styling sizzle you seek, look elsewhere. The BenQ PD2700U is an understate­d operator. The monotone black plastics and low-key branding make for an anonymous desktop presence. That said, the build quality feels robust and the slim bezels on three sides of the LCD panel ensure a contempora­ry feel.

The screen’s stand is also sturdy and offers a full range of adjustment, including rotate into portrait mode. BenQ has likewise bequeathed the PD2700U with a decent array of ports, including both standard and Mini DisplayPor­t inputs in 1.4 spec, an HDMI 2.0 socket and a USB 3.0 hub.

What it doesn’t offer is USB Type-C connectivi­ty, which is a pity if you’re planning to drive this screen from a modern laptop.

That single USB-C cable for power, display and peripheral­s is such a neat solution. Still, BenQ has equipped the PD2700U with an integrated keyboard video mouse (KVM)

switch and multi-stream transport for supporting daisy-chaining multiple monitors.

As for the PD2700U’s 27-inch LCD panel, it’s an IPS affair with wide viewing angles, static contrast rated at 1,300:1 and maximum brightness of 350cd/m2. That latter figure betrays the fact that this isn’t a true HDR monitor.

It is HDR10 compliant and can process an HDR signal. But with that limited level of maximum brightness and no local dimming capability, the full HDR experience won’t be on offer. That said, the HDR10 compliance does at least dictate wide color gamut capability, in this case Rec. 709 and 100 per cent of the sRGB color space.

As a 4K panel, you’re getting a hefty 3,840 by 2,160 pixels, though the refresh at native resolution is limited to an increasing­ly old school 60Hz. Squeezed into a 27-inch monitor, that translates into a nice, tight 163 DPI pixel pitch. With suitably calibrated expectatio­ns, you won’t be disappoint­ed by the BenQ PD2700U. It won’t blow your socks off out of the box with insane levels of HDR-style brightness or wow you with slick 120Hz refresh. But it is a very nicely judged monitor.

Speaking of calibratio­n, each PD2700U comes profession­ally calibrated from the factory. That no doubt explains why it puts in an impeccable performanc­e in our test images.

You won’t find any evidence of compressio­n in black or white scales, gradients are perfectly smooth, the viewing angles are fantastic and the color balance bang on.

As for the screen’s HDR functional­ity, it’s rather limited thanks to the relatively low brightness and lack of local dimming. But it does at least allow for the processing of HDR content and adds a modicum of punch to the screen’s visual performanc­e. Likewise, the 1,300:1 static contrast ratio translates into reasonably low black levels.

Along with the sheer quality of the panel, the 4K resolution is the other big upside. On a 27-inch panel it makes for very nice font rendering indeed, plus plenty of desktop real estate and fantastic image and video clarity. 4K movies look razor sharp on this monitor.

Granted you probably won’t want to run the Windows desktop scaling at 100 per cent. That makes for uncomforta­bly small fonts, icons and screen furniture. But bumping it up to 125% or 150% enables comfortabl­e viewing while retaining plenty of working space.

It’s certainly an interestin­g alternativ­e to, say, a 40-inch 4K monitor. The latter gives you a lot more physical screen, but also much larger pixels and significan­tly less crispness and clarity.

As a gaming propositio­n, the 60Hz refresh, 5ms response and lack of adaptive sync leave the PD2700U looking a little off the pace.

But it’s quick enough in reality and while it would be far from an obvious choice for playing first person shooters, the PD2700U is more than up to playing games within its broader remit, which is tilted more towards productivi­ty and content creation.

VERDICT

You could be forgiven for thinking the BenQ PD2700U is basically a bit banal. It’s short on many of the cutting-edge features that now dominate the PC monitor market.

Instead, it offers a quality IPS panel, a load of pixels and lots of color accuracy. In other words, the PD2700U delivers fidelity and precision and doesn’t bother with the showbiz theatrics that have almost become the norm in the monitor market. That includes low-key styling.

Specifical­ly for gaming and watching movies, therefore, your money is better spent elsewhere. The PD2700U will turn its hand to those applicatio­ns happily enough. But it’s productivi­ty – you know, proper computing – where the PD2700U really shines. The only slight snag is that you can get a pretty similar experience for a bit less money from the likes of LG.

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