PC Pro

AOC U2790PQU

When you’re buying a 27in 4K monitor for under £300, it’s hard to complain about flaws

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SCORE

PRICE £234 (£281 inc VAT) from uk.insight.com

If you’re looking for a 4K 27in IPS screen, and have a budget of under £300, it’s a straight shootout between this AOC and the Iiyama ProLite XU2792UHSU-B1. There are reasons to choose both of them – and reasons not to.

So why buy the AOC? For a start, because it packs a number of valuable features that Iiyama jettisons. Where Iiyama chooses a fixed stand, this

AOC includes a surprising­ly flexible offering: the three key benefits are 130mm of height adjustment, 90° of swivel and portrait mode.

It also feels more solid than the Iiyama. For example, where that screen wobbles on its stand when you press the OSD buttons, the U2790PQU has enough heft to stay (mostly) still when you prod at the joystick on its rear. Although as soon as the OSD interface springs into life, it’s clear that you aren’t dealing with a premium model. For a start, “spring” is too sprightly a word – “heaves” is better. This low-quality impression is further enhanced by the lightweigh­t action of the joystick, which is all too easy to push in the wrong direction.

Neverthele­ss, you’ll be rewarded with a better image than the default if you head into the Color Setup menu and choose sRGB from the Colour Temperatur­e options. This locks the brightness to 297cd/m2 from its peak of 465cd/m2, but that sacrifice is worth making because it generates accurate colours: it covers 95.6% of the sRGB gamut (with 97.3% volume) while returning an excellent 0.45 average Delta E. What you won’t get is punch, because a 869:1 contrast ratio is this panel’s biggest weakness .

It also has a limited range in terms of colour reproducti­on. While tweaking colours via the User setting meant it could cover around 77% of the DCI-P3 gamut, this will never be a monitor that will unleash the power of photos or films. For the record, there are speakers, but they fall into the “only for video calls” category.

Still, we don’t want to be too hard on the AOC U2790PQU. It was built to a budget yet both looks and feels more classy than the Iiyama. For day-to-day duties, its panel is fine, and nor should we forget that AOC packs 3,840 x

2,160 pixels into its 27in frame.

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 ??  ?? ABOVE With 130mm of height adjustment and 90˚ of swivel, the AOC is a flexible friend
ABOVE With 130mm of height adjustment and 90˚ of swivel, the AOC is a flexible friend

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