1920 x 1080 Resolution
Fast 4ms Response Time
300cd/m2 Brightness
DVI, VGA & HDMI
Wall Mountable
Acer KA270Hbid
- RiverDragon8
Top comments
BigYoSpeck
1 Feb 1614#11
This is about the 3rd or 4th time this has popped up at this price. Still it's a good monitor for the price if you're happy with HD but would enjoy something a little larger than the usual 24" offerings.
Be aware it has no speakers or audio pass through so it's not ideal for a games console unless you are using the optical out on them. You can get optical converters that will let you run a consoles optical out to regular speakers, but if you don't have the required gear in place it's just another expense, better to get a monitor with speakers in the first place.
For image quality I'm really happy with it. Being 1080p it's not exactly retina at say a comfortable 24" viewing distance, in fact it looks fairly grainy. Sitting back at say 40-50" to watch a film though and it's fine. At that distance to be honest a higher resolution would be wasted. So to watch video and to game on the 1080p resolution is probably preferable given how easy it is for your computer to draw. But the windows desktop is a compromise being a lower pixel pitch than you would really want. As a second monitor to game and watch video on it's perfect, and for the price I don't think you can really grumble that it's not 1440p. Once ultrawide 34" monitors hit a comfortable price point for me I'll be donating it to the parents as even on their 1080p 24" monitor they are putting Windows display scaling up to 125% so this will probably be perfect for them.
Colour reproduction is great. Watching a 10bit x265 video colours are fantastic and blacks are almost OLED deep. Colours don't quite leap out of the screen like the IPS panel on my Dell Venue 11 does, but that has a gloss screen where as this Acer is an anti-glare coated screen. I think comparing like with like there isn't a massive amount in it and next to a TN display it still blows it away. Viewing angles are great, maybe not up to IPS angles but you have to be at an extreme angle to actually get any variation. It's not like with a TN where just moving your head changes all the colours and contrast, you would have to move to an unrealistic and unusable angle to actually compromise the image on this VA panel.
It's also really bright. I'm at 10% brightness 50% contrast. Even if you're in a room with a lot of daylight there's a lot of headroom to cope with it.
Mine will run at up to 75hz 1080p using a custom resolution in the Radeon Crimson settings. My eyes can't really see the difference from 60hz to be honest though. 60fps video and most games look butter smooth, but in an FPS making quick mouse movements or moving a window quickly in Windows and I can see some motion blurring/ghosting. It's very mild though, I have to be actually looking for it to notice.
The bezel is fairly big at about 20mm. It's going to be a matter of personal preference how much that bothers you.
Is it too big? Measure your desk. It's just over 25 inches wide, my 22" monitor is only 20 inches wide. So it's not exactly a giant, look at your own desk and see if that's a size you're happy with.
Finally the power LED is an annoyingly bright, cheap looking blue affair. At certain angles it really glares at you, bleeds through the gaps in the other buttons and just looks tacky like all blue LED's do. Because it's right inbetween the power button and on screen display control buttons you can't easily cover it. It's the only thing I would say lets the monitor down. Other 'down sides' are actually perfectly acceptable given the price, but that power LED is just awful. It's like having someone shine a laser pen in your eye.
Pros:
-Cheap for the size
-VA panel gives good colours, viewing angles and the response time is fine to my eyes
-1080p native which is good for gaming and movies
-VESA mountable (I've got mine attached to a dual monitor desk clamp stand)
-3 inputs (hdmi, dvi and vga)
-Anti glare coating hardly reflects anything
Cons:
-1080p at 27" isn't sharp up close
-No speakers
-largeish bezel
-On screen controls are clumsy, unintuitive and slow to use
-Power LED looks cheap and distracting
-Only comes with a VGA cable
Latest comments (32)
adriandocherty
8 Feb 16#32
OOS now, it seems
Rhythmeister
2 Feb 16#31
Budget for another £15 postage if you live in the Highlands and Islands :disappointed:
tomstanley2
2 Feb 16#28
Would this be good for a HD CCTV monitor?
BigYoSpeck to tomstanley2
2 Feb 16#30
It can display a 1920x1080 full colour image on a 27" diagonal screen with an aspect ratio of 16:9. It can take DVI, HDMI and VGA inputs and it has no sound.
If your security setup can output to one of those input types, works at that resolution or less and doesn't need audio and you would sooner pay this price for it to be 27" rather than a cheaper 24" then, well, yeah...
spannerzone
1 Feb 161#17
If you have less than great eyesight then a 27" with 1920x1080 is pretty good (so my wife thinks) but i'd probably agree and say a 24" is better at that resolution and I'd personally consider a higher resolution on a 27" for non gaming use.
N1AK to spannerzone
2 Feb 16#29
The issue is that there is no 1140p/4K 27" screen at a similar price point, if you're not looking to spend double this amount a 27" 1440p screen isn't an option. A 32" 4K screen would be better than both of them, but it doesn't make it the right option for everyone.
harrysav
1 Feb 16#18
Mine's is a sony and to be honest I havent really noticed much lag, but Im a very casual gamer. My boy is not happy though and he thinks those milliseconds make all the difference when he's on cod.
Just read about the no speaker issue (thanks to bigyospeck) so I'l hold off this deal for now.
GolfRyder to harrysav
1 Feb 16#27
Even if it had built-in speakers they would have to be quite small and so consequently sound terrible.
Monzer
1 Feb 16#26
I agree. I am happy it doesn't come with crappy speakers. I use my vintage Arcam Alpha 8 and Mission M74 speakers for sound. Lovely! I am very happy with this monitor. Also I don't agree the blue light is too bright. I never notice it.
MrPuddington
1 Feb 16#24
This is a strange one. The price is ok, but I wonder why you would want one. For a normally sighted person, the pixel are too big. And I can say that with some conviction, because 1440p at 27" is a really nice resolution.
If you are partially sighted, I would rather spend a bit more on a 32" supermarket TV. That also gives you (synchronised) sound, so you can avoid messing around with external speakers.
BigYoSpeck to MrPuddington
1 Feb 16#25
It's all relative. At enough distance any dot pitch becomes 'retina'. Sitting back 50-60 inches from this and it looks sharp which is a comfortable distance for watching video or playing games. It also looks better playing a 1080p native game on this than upscaled for a 1440p monitor, if your video card can handle it great but not everyone's can.
Finally when comparing with a cheap 32" tv this will blow that away for response time and input lag in games I'm willing to wager. Image quality on this is just better than most TV panels as well. As for built in speakers, I don't want some 5W pieces of tat most TV's come with, I've got a good audio setup already.
It's not by any means perfect, but it is cheap for what it does and it does what it does well.
AppyHappyLad
1 Feb 16#23
It's not IPS... 27" just looks off if it's not IPS :/
Neobrown
1 Feb 16#22
Im sure i've heard somewhere that game mode actually increases input delay from controller to screen.
Better to have as little effects on screen as possible. Standard/basic settings
redsquirrel
1 Feb 16#21
Wow, i just ordered 24" for same price yesterday.. i did look for a 26 or 27" but for the cost no joy. I'm sure (hope) the 24" should be fine..
Octopus_
1 Feb 16#20
Acer panels usually are balanced, and overblown at 1080p? What do you mean by that?
mark_mcd123
1 Feb 16#19
I've had one of these since Oct '15. Paid 119 back then too.
Nice, does the job, no complaints. Sits on my desk, at arms length away - plenty of screen "real estate" for work. Plus, when I game on it, it seems to cope without any issues.
For £119, I thought it was a bargain. Four months later... and have no reason to change this opinion.
harrysav
1 Feb 16#5
Any idea if this is good for playing ps3/ps4 on? My son keeps telling me to get him a monitor as he gets 'lag' when playing on our tv.
Rhythm to harrysav
1 Feb 16#6
Should be fine but has he tried "game mode" on the TV?
Dan7712 to harrysav
1 Feb 16#16
You don't happen to have an LG TV do you? The input lag on mine was terrible! As a casual gamer even I noticed it.
But to answer your question - As long as this has HDMI ports, you will be fine.
ibz100
1 Feb 16#12
If you're connecting a PS4 or any other console to it, how do you output sound to a set of speakers (aux input)? Does the monitor itself have a 3.5mm headphone jack on it?
Rhythm to ibz100
1 Feb 16#14
You could do optical to a soundbar or just use headphones from the controller
BigYoSpeck to ibz100
1 Feb 16#15
Your two options are the headphone output on the controller or getting an optical to analogue converter. There is no audio features on this monitor whatsoever.
BigYoSpeck
1 Feb 1614#11
This is about the 3rd or 4th time this has popped up at this price. Still it's a good monitor for the price if you're happy with HD but would enjoy something a little larger than the usual 24" offerings.
Be aware it has no speakers or audio pass through so it's not ideal for a games console unless you are using the optical out on them. You can get optical converters that will let you run a consoles optical out to regular speakers, but if you don't have the required gear in place it's just another expense, better to get a monitor with speakers in the first place.
For image quality I'm really happy with it. Being 1080p it's not exactly retina at say a comfortable 24" viewing distance, in fact it looks fairly grainy. Sitting back at say 40-50" to watch a film though and it's fine. At that distance to be honest a higher resolution would be wasted. So to watch video and to game on the 1080p resolution is probably preferable given how easy it is for your computer to draw. But the windows desktop is a compromise being a lower pixel pitch than you would really want. As a second monitor to game and watch video on it's perfect, and for the price I don't think you can really grumble that it's not 1440p. Once ultrawide 34" monitors hit a comfortable price point for me I'll be donating it to the parents as even on their 1080p 24" monitor they are putting Windows display scaling up to 125% so this will probably be perfect for them.
Colour reproduction is great. Watching a 10bit x265 video colours are fantastic and blacks are almost OLED deep. Colours don't quite leap out of the screen like the IPS panel on my Dell Venue 11 does, but that has a gloss screen where as this Acer is an anti-glare coated screen. I think comparing like with like there isn't a massive amount in it and next to a TN display it still blows it away. Viewing angles are great, maybe not up to IPS angles but you have to be at an extreme angle to actually get any variation. It's not like with a TN where just moving your head changes all the colours and contrast, you would have to move to an unrealistic and unusable angle to actually compromise the image on this VA panel.
It's also really bright. I'm at 10% brightness 50% contrast. Even if you're in a room with a lot of daylight there's a lot of headroom to cope with it.
Mine will run at up to 75hz 1080p using a custom resolution in the Radeon Crimson settings. My eyes can't really see the difference from 60hz to be honest though. 60fps video and most games look butter smooth, but in an FPS making quick mouse movements or moving a window quickly in Windows and I can see some motion blurring/ghosting. It's very mild though, I have to be actually looking for it to notice.
The bezel is fairly big at about 20mm. It's going to be a matter of personal preference how much that bothers you.
Is it too big? Measure your desk. It's just over 25 inches wide, my 22" monitor is only 20 inches wide. So it's not exactly a giant, look at your own desk and see if that's a size you're happy with.
Finally the power LED is an annoyingly bright, cheap looking blue affair. At certain angles it really glares at you, bleeds through the gaps in the other buttons and just looks tacky like all blue LED's do. Because it's right inbetween the power button and on screen display control buttons you can't easily cover it. It's the only thing I would say lets the monitor down. Other 'down sides' are actually perfectly acceptable given the price, but that power LED is just awful. It's like having someone shine a laser pen in your eye.
Pros:
-Cheap for the size
-VA panel gives good colours, viewing angles and the response time is fine to my eyes
-1080p native which is good for gaming and movies
-VESA mountable (I've got mine attached to a dual monitor desk clamp stand)
-3 inputs (hdmi, dvi and vga)
-Anti glare coating hardly reflects anything
Cons:
-1080p at 27" isn't sharp up close
-No speakers
-largeish bezel
-On screen controls are clumsy, unintuitive and slow to use
-Power LED looks cheap and distracting
-Only comes with a VGA cable
urbanaardvark to BigYoSpeck
1 Feb 16#13
Thanks for the in depth view matey, I'll give it a swerve and get the 25" designo ove had my eye on.
Octopus_
1 Feb 16#2
Anyone got one of these? What's the bezel like? Looks bloody huge.. :confused:
Monzer to Octopus_
1 Feb 16#10
No it isn't huge. No I don't think it's overblown at 1080p (I use a 50in plasma in a dual monitor setup with mine). No the blue light isn't too bright. Yes I love mine.
pablozzzzz
1 Feb 16#9
acer cold
harrysav
1 Feb 161#8
Havent tried game mode, why didnt I think of that? Lol.
I need one for his room anyway as its a bit of a hassle sharing the living room set.
I had my eyes on a 27" samsung curved set (currys around £260) mainly because the curved screen looks quite nice but this one looks like a better deal and I'l save some dosh☺️
jackbremer
1 Feb 162#7
This resolution is great for games, but on a 27" I'd be looking for 1440 at least.
pontprennau
1 Feb 16#4
I've got 2 of these, love them :smiley: bezel doesn't annoy me but it's exactly 2cm.
urbanaardvark
1 Feb 16#1
I've been looking for a monitor this week (been using an old flat screen TV and it's rubbish) I have a budget of about £180-£200 is this one any good? or will 27" be too big to sit at a desk with?
Octopus_ to urbanaardvark
1 Feb 161#3
27" is pretty borderline imo. I use two 24" bezel-less Acer panels, and they're pretty big.
Opening post
1920 x 1080 Resolution
Fast 4ms Response Time
300cd/m2 Brightness
DVI, VGA & HDMI
Wall Mountable
Acer KA270Hbid
- RiverDragon8
Top comments
Be aware it has no speakers or audio pass through so it's not ideal for a games console unless you are using the optical out on them. You can get optical converters that will let you run a consoles optical out to regular speakers, but if you don't have the required gear in place it's just another expense, better to get a monitor with speakers in the first place.
For image quality I'm really happy with it. Being 1080p it's not exactly retina at say a comfortable 24" viewing distance, in fact it looks fairly grainy. Sitting back at say 40-50" to watch a film though and it's fine. At that distance to be honest a higher resolution would be wasted. So to watch video and to game on the 1080p resolution is probably preferable given how easy it is for your computer to draw. But the windows desktop is a compromise being a lower pixel pitch than you would really want. As a second monitor to game and watch video on it's perfect, and for the price I don't think you can really grumble that it's not 1440p. Once ultrawide 34" monitors hit a comfortable price point for me I'll be donating it to the parents as even on their 1080p 24" monitor they are putting Windows display scaling up to 125% so this will probably be perfect for them.
Colour reproduction is great. Watching a 10bit x265 video colours are fantastic and blacks are almost OLED deep. Colours don't quite leap out of the screen like the IPS panel on my Dell Venue 11 does, but that has a gloss screen where as this Acer is an anti-glare coated screen. I think comparing like with like there isn't a massive amount in it and next to a TN display it still blows it away. Viewing angles are great, maybe not up to IPS angles but you have to be at an extreme angle to actually get any variation. It's not like with a TN where just moving your head changes all the colours and contrast, you would have to move to an unrealistic and unusable angle to actually compromise the image on this VA panel.
It's also really bright. I'm at 10% brightness 50% contrast. Even if you're in a room with a lot of daylight there's a lot of headroom to cope with it.
Mine will run at up to 75hz 1080p using a custom resolution in the Radeon Crimson settings. My eyes can't really see the difference from 60hz to be honest though. 60fps video and most games look butter smooth, but in an FPS making quick mouse movements or moving a window quickly in Windows and I can see some motion blurring/ghosting. It's very mild though, I have to be actually looking for it to notice.
The bezel is fairly big at about 20mm. It's going to be a matter of personal preference how much that bothers you.
Is it too big? Measure your desk. It's just over 25 inches wide, my 22" monitor is only 20 inches wide. So it's not exactly a giant, look at your own desk and see if that's a size you're happy with.
Finally the power LED is an annoyingly bright, cheap looking blue affair. At certain angles it really glares at you, bleeds through the gaps in the other buttons and just looks tacky like all blue LED's do. Because it's right inbetween the power button and on screen display control buttons you can't easily cover it. It's the only thing I would say lets the monitor down. Other 'down sides' are actually perfectly acceptable given the price, but that power LED is just awful. It's like having someone shine a laser pen in your eye.
Pros:
-Cheap for the size
-VA panel gives good colours, viewing angles and the response time is fine to my eyes
-1080p native which is good for gaming and movies
-VESA mountable (I've got mine attached to a dual monitor desk clamp stand)
-3 inputs (hdmi, dvi and vga)
-Anti glare coating hardly reflects anything
Cons:
-1080p at 27" isn't sharp up close
-No speakers
-largeish bezel
-On screen controls are clumsy, unintuitive and slow to use
-Power LED looks cheap and distracting
-Only comes with a VGA cable
Latest comments (32)
If your security setup can output to one of those input types, works at that resolution or less and doesn't need audio and you would sooner pay this price for it to be 27" rather than a cheaper 24" then, well, yeah...
Just read about the no speaker issue (thanks to bigyospeck) so I'l hold off this deal for now.
If you are partially sighted, I would rather spend a bit more on a 32" supermarket TV. That also gives you (synchronised) sound, so you can avoid messing around with external speakers.
Finally when comparing with a cheap 32" tv this will blow that away for response time and input lag in games I'm willing to wager. Image quality on this is just better than most TV panels as well. As for built in speakers, I don't want some 5W pieces of tat most TV's come with, I've got a good audio setup already.
It's not by any means perfect, but it is cheap for what it does and it does what it does well.
Better to have as little effects on screen as possible. Standard/basic settings
Nice, does the job, no complaints. Sits on my desk, at arms length away - plenty of screen "real estate" for work. Plus, when I game on it, it seems to cope without any issues.
For £119, I thought it was a bargain. Four months later... and have no reason to change this opinion.
But to answer your question - As long as this has HDMI ports, you will be fine.
Be aware it has no speakers or audio pass through so it's not ideal for a games console unless you are using the optical out on them. You can get optical converters that will let you run a consoles optical out to regular speakers, but if you don't have the required gear in place it's just another expense, better to get a monitor with speakers in the first place.
For image quality I'm really happy with it. Being 1080p it's not exactly retina at say a comfortable 24" viewing distance, in fact it looks fairly grainy. Sitting back at say 40-50" to watch a film though and it's fine. At that distance to be honest a higher resolution would be wasted. So to watch video and to game on the 1080p resolution is probably preferable given how easy it is for your computer to draw. But the windows desktop is a compromise being a lower pixel pitch than you would really want. As a second monitor to game and watch video on it's perfect, and for the price I don't think you can really grumble that it's not 1440p. Once ultrawide 34" monitors hit a comfortable price point for me I'll be donating it to the parents as even on their 1080p 24" monitor they are putting Windows display scaling up to 125% so this will probably be perfect for them.
Colour reproduction is great. Watching a 10bit x265 video colours are fantastic and blacks are almost OLED deep. Colours don't quite leap out of the screen like the IPS panel on my Dell Venue 11 does, but that has a gloss screen where as this Acer is an anti-glare coated screen. I think comparing like with like there isn't a massive amount in it and next to a TN display it still blows it away. Viewing angles are great, maybe not up to IPS angles but you have to be at an extreme angle to actually get any variation. It's not like with a TN where just moving your head changes all the colours and contrast, you would have to move to an unrealistic and unusable angle to actually compromise the image on this VA panel.
It's also really bright. I'm at 10% brightness 50% contrast. Even if you're in a room with a lot of daylight there's a lot of headroom to cope with it.
Mine will run at up to 75hz 1080p using a custom resolution in the Radeon Crimson settings. My eyes can't really see the difference from 60hz to be honest though. 60fps video and most games look butter smooth, but in an FPS making quick mouse movements or moving a window quickly in Windows and I can see some motion blurring/ghosting. It's very mild though, I have to be actually looking for it to notice.
The bezel is fairly big at about 20mm. It's going to be a matter of personal preference how much that bothers you.
Is it too big? Measure your desk. It's just over 25 inches wide, my 22" monitor is only 20 inches wide. So it's not exactly a giant, look at your own desk and see if that's a size you're happy with.
Finally the power LED is an annoyingly bright, cheap looking blue affair. At certain angles it really glares at you, bleeds through the gaps in the other buttons and just looks tacky like all blue LED's do. Because it's right inbetween the power button and on screen display control buttons you can't easily cover it. It's the only thing I would say lets the monitor down. Other 'down sides' are actually perfectly acceptable given the price, but that power LED is just awful. It's like having someone shine a laser pen in your eye.
Pros:
-Cheap for the size
-VA panel gives good colours, viewing angles and the response time is fine to my eyes
-1080p native which is good for gaming and movies
-VESA mountable (I've got mine attached to a dual monitor desk clamp stand)
-3 inputs (hdmi, dvi and vga)
-Anti glare coating hardly reflects anything
Cons:
-1080p at 27" isn't sharp up close
-No speakers
-largeish bezel
-On screen controls are clumsy, unintuitive and slow to use
-Power LED looks cheap and distracting
-Only comes with a VGA cable
I need one for his room anyway as its a bit of a hassle sharing the living room set.
I had my eyes on a 27" samsung curved set (currys around £260) mainly because the curved screen looks quite nice but this one looks like a better deal and I'l save some dosh☺️