PC Pro

Iiyama ProLite XUB2792UHS­U

Not the classiest monitor, but the ProLite gives superb colour performanc­e at an almost irresistib­le price

- TIM DANTON

SCORE PRICE £324 (£389 inc VAT) from scan.co.uk

When a company claims that a screen is designed for “creative profession­als” – as Iiyama does with this 27in 4K display – you expect some supporting evidence. A definitive promise about colour accuracy would be good; all Iiyama states on its website is that 100% of the sRGB gamut is covered. You also expect the screen to be calibrated before it leaves the factory, with a report supplied in the box. There are no such reassuranc­es here.

But then, there’s another thing you’d expect from such a monitor, and that’s a price nudging £700, £800, even £1,000. That’s certainly what we’re accustomed to seeing with profession­al 4K screens.

With the XUB2792UHS­U, Iiyama has slashed the price by taking a different approach. It’s shipping panels direct from the factory, without the calibratio­n tests we normally see from the likes of Eizo and NEC – banking instead on the reliabilit­y of its manufactur­ing process and its high standards of quality testing.

There’s an element of risk involved in this, as less accurate panels could slip through the net, but if my sample is any reflection, the hardware is of an extremely high standard. The ProLite achieved some tremendous results in our technical tests, hitting a peak brightness of 355cd/m2 with a measured contrast ratio of 1,068:1. While its brightness wasn’t perfectly uniform – it fell off by between 6% and 11% at the edges – that’s still a very respectabl­e result. And the undoubted highlight was an average Delta E of 0.33; any score under 1 is considered excellent, and even at its very worst this panel scored 0.63.

The ProLite XUB2792UHS­U also delivered on the promise of 100%

sRGB coverage, with a 10-bit lookup table helping deliver a 99.6% result in our tests. The news isn’t so good for those who work in the Adobe RGB space, however: the panel only proved capable of reproducin­g 72.7% of that gamut, and fared little better in the DCI-P3 space with 76%. If you’re a web designer working in sRGB, this is an excellent monitor, but print designers should stick with a suitably calibrated Eizo display. While that limitation may be disappoint­ing, it’s hard to complain when you look again at that glorious 4K resolution and consider that £389 price. Yes, cheaper 27in 4K monitors are available – at the start of the year I reviewed the sub-£300 Hannspree HW272PD ( see issue 293, p64) – but none approaches this level of quality. The Iiyama even pushes the brilliant NEC MultiSync EA271U ( see issue 293, p62) close, and that costs around £725.

It doesn’t quite best it, though. One area where the Iiyama falls behind is its on-screen display (OSD), which is counter-intuitive in almost every way. In particular, the left and right navigation buttons double as up and down buttons depending on the context, so if you’re deep in menus things get confusing. Still, once you get the hang of it you can switch between standard, game,

“The ProLite achieved some tremendous results, hitting a peak brightness of 355cd/m2 with a measured contrast ratio of 1,068:1”

cinema, scenery and text modes by pressing the Exit button (see what I mean about counterint­uitive?), control the picture-in-picture window and tweak the colour balance. Another niggle is that the display didn’t always recognise when my laptop was resuming from standby; I had to press the input button on the monitor to wake it from its slumber. All three major inputs are catered for, with DVI, DisplayPor­t and HDMI ports sitting side by side, and there are two convenient­ly placed USB-A ports on the left-hand side if you want to use it as a USB hub. Connectivi­ty is another area where the NEC EA271U wins out, however, with a forwardloo­king USB-C input and an extra HDMI connector.

The MultiSync also has narrower bezels, compared to the 8mm border surroundin­g the top, left and right of the Iiyama’s screen, and while the ProLite’s stand is solid and flexible – it can pivot 90°, swivels left and right through 45° and offers 130mm of height adjustment – its looks are best described as functional. The NEC will swivel through almost 360°, and wins out on both design and build quality.

My final criticism has to be of the weedy 2W speakers. They may be good enough for conference calls, but I wouldn’t want to rely on them for watching TV, listening to music or playing games (although gamers should note the panel’s 4ms response time and overdrive options). So it’s irritating that Iiyama wastes a physical button on a volume shortcut; it would make much more sense to have a brightness button, for instance.

In all the NEC remains a superior monitor – it has a far better range of inputs and comes pre-calibrated, with an OSD and build quality that are in a different class to the Iiyama. But when it comes to image-quality-per-buck, the ProLite XUB2792UHS­U is simply unbeatable.

SPECIFICAT­IONS 27in 3,840 x 2,160 IPS panel max 75Hz refresh rate 4ms response time DisplayPor­t HDMI 2 (with HDCP 1.4) DVI USB hub with 2 x USB-A 3 ports 2 x 2W speakers portrait mode -45° to 45° swivel

-5° to 22° tilt 130mm height adjustment 614 x 230 x 398-528mm (WDH) 6.4kg 3yr warranty

 ??  ?? LEFT Two USB-A ports are convenient­ly located on the left side of the monitor ABOVE The flexible stand can pivot 90° and swivel 45° in either direction
LEFT Two USB-A ports are convenient­ly located on the left side of the monitor ABOVE The flexible stand can pivot 90° and swivel 45° in either direction
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ABOVE The Iiyama’s design won’t turn any heads, but it’s brilliant value for money
ABOVE The Iiyama’s design won’t turn any heads, but it’s brilliant value for money

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