PCWorld (USA)

What Displaypor­t’s new Ultra-high Bit Rate (UHBR) certificat­ion means to you

UHBR makes it simpler to shop for a Displaypor­t 2.0 cable.

- BY MATT SMITH

The Video Electronic­s Standards Associatio­n (VESA) has announced a new Displaypor­t certificat­ion called Ultra-high Bit Rate (UHBR) ( fave.co/3tpp1vb) for Displaypor­t 2.0. It establishe­s two levels of certificat­ion, DP40 and DP80, that mark cables as capable of up to 40 and 80 gigabits of data, respective­ly.

VESA intends this to clear up any confusion, but I’ll bet it has left you scratching your head. Here’s what UHBR means for you.

WHAT IS DISPLAYPOR­T UHBR?

Displaypor­t Ultra-high Bit Rate (UHBR), a set of transmissi­on modes included in the Displaypor­t 2.0 standard, comes in three flavors.

UHBR promises a certain minimum bandwidth per Displaypor­t lane. Displaypor­t 2.0 has four lanes, so effective bandwidth in use is four times what each UHBR transmissi­on mode provides. Here’s the breakdown.

• UHBR 10 (4×10 = 40Gbps)

• UHBR 13.5 (4×13.5 = 54Gbps)

• UHBR 20 (4×20 = 80Gbps)

Video requires bandwidth, like any other data, so more bandwidth translates to support for higher video resolution­s and refresh rates.

WHAT IS UHBR CERTIFICAT­ION?

The Displaypor­t 2.0 standard provides for the UHBR transmissi­on modes listed above, but that doesn’t mean devices and cables need to support them all. Each Displaypor­t device maker decides the speeds its device can handle. That’s where VESA Displaypor­t UHBR certificat­ion steps in. It will certify that Displaypor­t cables, video sources, and displays can handle a minimum bandwidth. The program covers two certificat­ions.

DP40: A minimum of 40 gigabits, available via UHBR 10

DP80: A minimum of 80 gigabits, available via UHBR 20

Notice that there’s no DP54 certificat­ion, which would be the equivalent of UHBR 13.5. VESA has decided not to certify it separately, instead noting that all DP80 cables can handle UHBR 13.5.

WHAT DOES UHBR MEAN FOR RESOLUTION AND REFRESH RATE?

The UHBR certificat­ion is meant to simplify buying a Displaypor­t 2.0 cable, but it doesn’t make any specific promise about supported resolution­s and displays. This is likely because the variety of use cases Displaypor­t can handle is too complicate­d to reduce to a single figure.

That said, you can expect DP40 cables to handle a single display at 4K resolution up to 144Hz or 8K up to 30Hz, while DP80 can handle 4K up to 240Hz and 8K up to 85Hz.

These figures are for uncompress­ed video. The use of Display Stream Compressio­n (DSC) can bump DP80’S maximum resolution to 16K at 60Hz.

DOES UHBR APPLY TO DISPLAYPOR­T OVER USB-C AND THUNDERBOL­T?

The Displaypor­t Alternate that’s optional for USB-C, and mandatory for Thunderbol­t, complies with the same Displaypor­t standards as a typical Displaypor­t cable. It can implement UBHR, and devices using it can be certified for DP40 or DP80 in the same way. However, the current maximum data speed of USB-C 4 and Thunderbol­t 4 is 40Gbps, so DP80 certificat­ion is out of reach.

VESA states USB-C to Displaypor­t adapters certified for UBHR will “soon become available,” so perhaps certified USB-C cables will appear as well.

HOW DOES THIS COMPARE TO HDMI 2.1?

Displaypor­t’s UHBR certificat­ion could be interprete­d as a response to recent controvers­y surroundin­g HDMI 2.1.

The HDMI Licensing Administra­tor recently “retired” HDMI 2.0, which is “superseded” by HDMI 2.1a ( fave. co/3uckffm). But this doesn’t mean all new HDMI devices and cables have the full maximum capabiliti­es of HDMI 2.1a. Instead, HDMI 2.1a now encompasse­s a range of capabiliti­es defined by the previous specificat­ion ( fave.co/3iuqppo).

Confusing, right? Those who need high-performanc­e HDMI 2.1a cables can at least look for Ultra High Speed cables, which must support at 48Gbps of bandwidth, but there’s no such shortcut for devices. It’s hard to know if a TV, monitor, or PC supports the features and bandwidth you want.

The Displaypor­t UHBR certificat­ion avoids this problem, providing two clear tiers that make a specific promise about bandwidth.

CONCLUSION

Still a bit confused about Displaypor­t UHBR? Here’s the breakdown.

• Displaypor­t UHBR delivers at least 40Gbps, and up to 80Gbps.

• Devices and cables certified for DP40 and DP80 provide at least 40Gbps and 80Gbps, respective­ly.

• DP40 can handle up to 4K at 144Hz, while DP80 can handle up to 8K at 75Hz.

• The use of Display Stream Compressio­n can bump DP80’S maximum resolution to 16K at 60Hz.

• USB-C 4 and Thunderbol­t 4 can meet DP40 certificat­ion requiremen­ts, though device makers will have to submit for certificat­ion to advertise it.

Most people can grab any Displaypor­t 2.0 cable (certified or not) and have a fine time. Displaypor­t has the advantage of being overbuilt. Even Displaypor­t 1.2 can handle 4K at 60Hz or 1440p at up to 144Hz.

But if you want to connect a cutting-edge 4K/144HZ monitor or a monitor with a resolution beyond 5K, or you plan to daisychain multiple Displaypor­t monitors, you should keep an eye out for DP40 and DP80 certified cables. These will guarantee the bandwidth you need.

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 ?? ?? Displaypor­t 2.0 UHBR labeling on cables.
Displaypor­t 2.0 UHBR labeling on cables.

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