Excellent price for a 4K monitor, never mind that it is IPS and from a decent manufacturer / supplier with 3 year warranty. Only downside is that I can't find any reviews. However, I have ordered one and will post a review (now in Post # once I have had a chance to check it out. NOTE: TCB tracked for me at £4.80 reducing the price further. This is a modern 4K design and so natively works at 60Hz unlike some of the older 4K designs which maxed out at 30Hz.
Backlight Technology:
LED
Maximum Adjustable Height:
150 mm
Tilt Angle:
-5°to35°
Swivel Angle:
60°
Video
Maximum Resolution:
3840 x 2160
Standard Refresh Rate:
60 Hz
Colour Support:
1.07 Billion Colors
Contrast Ratio:
100,000,000:1
Brightness:
300 cd/m²
Audio
Speakers:
Yes
Interfaces/Ports
DVI:
Yes
HDMI:
Yes
DisplayPort:
Yes
Power Description
Standby Power Consumption:
450 mW
Off-Mode Power Consumption:
350 mW
Energy Efficiency Class:
C
Energy Consumption per Year:
88 kWh
Operating Power Consumption (Energy Star):
47.50 W
Operating Power Consumption (EEL):
60 W
Physical Characteristics
Colour:
Black
Height:
370 mm
Width:
624 mm
Depth:
64 mm
Height with Stand:
544 mm
Width with Stand:
624 mm
Depth with Stand:
237 mm
Weight (Approximate):
4.99 kg
Weight with Stand (Approximate):
7.90 kg
Miscellaneous
Package Contents:
•CB271HK Widescreen LCD Monitor
•1 x DVI Cable
•1 x Displayport Cable
•Power Cord
Environmentally Friendly:
Yes
Environmental Certification:
TCO Certified Displays 6.0
Warranty
Limited Warranty:
3 Year
Top comments
Lowtrawler
8y 25d6#8
Arrived home and the monitor had been delivered. Am writing this using the monitor at the moment. First impressions as follows:
1. Assembly, pretty easy. Once everything was unpacked, it took less than 3 minutes to assemble the stand and attach the screen.
2. Looks and stand. The stand has a good range of up, down, tilt and swivel adjustments. The screen can be used Portrait and landscape. Everything has a fluid motion and feels well made.
3. Connecting up. The connectors all point downwards and do what was intended of them. No problems inserting the provided Displaylink, audio and power cables.
4. Configuring. The monitor was recognised immediately and I was able to easily set everything up in W10 - 150% scaling, 4k and 60Hz.
5. Picture Quality. I've not really had time to give a considered opinion but have run a few UHD videos, Photoshop and a couple of games. There are no obvious signs of ghosting, backlight bleed is imperceptible and colours look realistic without need for calibration. Whites appear a little grey but I will likely be able to correct it in settings. This is my 3rd IPS monitor and I have no complaints with this one.
6. Sound. The speakers are VERY tinny. Probably the worst monitor speakers I have come across. Maybe I can adjust it in settings but not very impressive.
Obviously the above comments are very much first impressions. However, it's looking something of a bargain at the moment.
Latest comments (33)
Lowtrawler
8y 24d#33
II'd say it's a little under 1cm at the sides and top- call it 0.8mm. At the bottom, it is around 1.5cm.
Bugz
8y 24d#32
Hi,
What is the width of the bezel on this?
Just want to know if it will look symmetrical with my other 27 inch
Lowtrawler
8y 25d#31
No. I'm thinking about freesync, gsync, 144Hz, ghosting and response times. You will very rarely find an IPS panel branded with a gaming moniker for these reasons. The poster had made clear they wanted a monitor mainly for gaming. That being the case, you probably don't need the viewing angles and colour clarity of IPS. Spend less on a TN panel or the same amount on a gaming panel with additional features.
bradkaloncox
8y 25d#30
does this display have HDR compatability?
Seanspeed
8y 25d#29
I just dont get this. Are people still thinking that 'response time' = input lag? If you're a competitive CSGO player or something, sure, avoid IPS and get something with the best motion clarity possible, but then you're probably not thinking about 60hz in the first place.
IPS is excellent for like 99% of gaming in most cases.
ps3three
8y 25d#27
Just a note for anyone who buys these, the other 4k asus monitor s27hk had a manufacturing defect with the power supply where it doesnt go out of hibernation, and asus can never seem to diagnose the fault as they dont test power supplies when you send it back.
I dont know if these use the same power supplies, but i would assume they do, and if you get this problem the best way to fix it is just to buy a replacement supply off amazon.
bnwubnfguisr to ps3three
8y 25d#28
These have built-in power supply
ellsa100
8y 25d#15
What about the cost of getting a basic 4k graphics card (these seem uber pricey)? Suggestions? thanks
3kliksphilip to ellsa100
8y 25d#16
It's difficult to say because all of the benchmarks run games at highest settings- which even brings the Geforce 1080 to its knees at 4K. Turn it down to high and you'll have a very smooth and enjoyable 60 FPS 4K experience with it and with a minimal drop in quality. I haven't had any experience with the 1060, 1070 or 480, but I suspect they'll all be very playable at 4K at a mixture of medium to high settings. It really depends where you rank 4K in the list of graphics options you'd like to play at. Having used it for a while I rank it highly and would rather drop almost any other graphics setting before lowering the resolution.
Lowtrawler to ellsa100
8y 25d#17
Well, the 1060 = old 970; 1070 = old 980Ti and 1080 is a whole new class of card. You can currently pick up new 970's for about £180 and 980Ti's for around £320. Means you can save about £75 if you go for the older, more power hungry cards. Save more if you go second-hand. Still pricey but not as bad as you might have thought.
MBeeching to ellsa100
8y 25d#26
I'm reasonably satisfied with the 980Ti though the 970 didn't cut it. I dislike motion blur and depth of field so that saves some frames, MSAA is usually a no-no as it will cost you dearly in certain areas. Dropping shadows a notch usually pays dividends too.
If it's still going badly I drop down to 50Hz which leaves me some headroom (MGS V / GTA V / Forza Horizon 3 / BF1). Yet despite all that messing around I end up playing Rocket League most of the time...
HeadphoneGeeza
8y 25d#25
Hisense h40m3300
farazfastian
8y 25d1#24
Guys any recommendations of decent 27 2k or 4k monitor for work within £300?
HeadphoneGeeza
8y 25d#23
I have an Xbox One S and would like to make use of its HDR capabities. I can't see that this monitor has HDR. Can anyone correct me?
Thanks
ellsa100
8y 25d#19
looks like it has gone...you snooze you lose...
Lowtrawler to ellsa100
8y 25d#22
Thanks, I've marked the thread to expire.
ronaldmacdonald
8y 25d#21
I have two of these (the 24") for dual display - 1 hdmi and one DisplayPort. For the price they are very good - the range of motion is brilliant for working in portrait.
shaneoleeds
8y 25d#20
website says 1 left but the order is cancelled when processing payment due to no stock
colganraz
8y 25d#18
anyone thinking of buying this but using an older graphics card like me - you can put the res in 2k and use it at 1440p instead and still looks real good
Spooke
8y 25d#11
Seems like a good deal, very tempted. Has anyone used it for gaming?
Lowtrawler to Spooke
8y 25d#14
If you want a monitor mainly for gaming then you probably shouldn't be looking at an IPS panel. Having said that, it works fine for many games and so it will depend on what sort of games you play. At 4ms, this is about as good as IPS panels get.
Lowtrawler
8y 25d#13
The monitor is a VESA 100x100 standard and so your linked stand would appear to be compatible.
Lostmittens
8y 25d#12
Anyone know if a stand like this would work with it?
iserlohn
8y 25d1#10
I'm writing this on 2 of these bad boys. The quality is fantastic for the price. It has DVI, HDMI 2.0 and DP connections, as well as a VESA mount (behind the detachable monitor stand connector plate in the pictures).
kevintoffer
8y 25d#9
Extraordinary price for anything 27, IPS, VESA and above 1080.
What's the general feeling on Acer monitors these days though? Historically they used to rate lower than Asus, LG, etc and with a lot of variation between models... so it was hard to identify the good ones.
Arrived home and the monitor had been delivered. Am writing this using the monitor at the moment. First impressions as follows:
1. Assembly, pretty easy. Once everything was unpacked, it took less than 3 minutes to assemble the stand and attach the screen.
2. Looks and stand. The stand has a good range of up, down, tilt and swivel adjustments. The screen can be used Portrait and landscape. Everything has a fluid motion and feels well made.
3. Connecting up. The connectors all point downwards and do what was intended of them. No problems inserting the provided Displaylink, audio and power cables.
4. Configuring. The monitor was recognised immediately and I was able to easily set everything up in W10 - 150% scaling, 4k and 60Hz.
5. Picture Quality. I've not really had time to give a considered opinion but have run a few UHD videos, Photoshop and a couple of games. There are no obvious signs of ghosting, backlight bleed is imperceptible and colours look realistic without need for calibration. Whites appear a little grey but I will likely be able to correct it in settings. This is my 3rd IPS monitor and I have no complaints with this one.
6. Sound. The speakers are VERY tinny. Probably the worst monitor speakers I have come across. Maybe I can adjust it in settings but not very impressive.
Obviously the above comments are very much first impressions. However, it's looking something of a bargain at the moment.
reutunes
8y 25d#5
Bought this the other day. Crap connections but a nice unit. Sits nicely next to my imac and works well via display port
Lowtrawler to reutunes
8y 25d#6
Thanks for the comment. What do you mean by "crap connections" is it that there is only one of each or that they are difficult to access, or something else?
dogbert682 to reutunes
8y 25d#7
Any idea if it is running 4k @ 60Hz? I'm thinking of this for my MacBook Pro w/ Retina at work.
Opening post
Technical Information
Screen Size:
68.6 cm (27")
Screen Mode:
4K UHD
Panel Technology:
In-plane Switching (IPS) Technology
Response Time:
4 ms
Aspect Ratio:
16:9
Backlight Technology:
LED
Maximum Adjustable Height:
150 mm
Tilt Angle:
-5°to35°
Swivel Angle:
60°
Video
Maximum Resolution:
3840 x 2160
Standard Refresh Rate:
60 Hz
Colour Support:
1.07 Billion Colors
Contrast Ratio:
100,000,000:1
Brightness:
300 cd/m²
Audio
Speakers:
Yes
Interfaces/Ports
DVI:
Yes
HDMI:
Yes
DisplayPort:
Yes
Power Description
Standby Power Consumption:
450 mW
Off-Mode Power Consumption:
350 mW
Energy Efficiency Class:
C
Energy Consumption per Year:
88 kWh
Operating Power Consumption (Energy Star):
47.50 W
Operating Power Consumption (EEL):
60 W
Physical Characteristics
Colour:
Black
Height:
370 mm
Width:
624 mm
Depth:
64 mm
Height with Stand:
544 mm
Width with Stand:
624 mm
Depth with Stand:
237 mm
Weight (Approximate):
4.99 kg
Weight with Stand (Approximate):
7.90 kg
Miscellaneous
Package Contents:
•CB271HK Widescreen LCD Monitor
•1 x DVI Cable
•1 x Displayport Cable
•Power Cord
Environmentally Friendly:
Yes
Environmental Certification:
TCO Certified Displays 6.0
Warranty
Limited Warranty:
3 Year
Top comments
1. Assembly, pretty easy. Once everything was unpacked, it took less than 3 minutes to assemble the stand and attach the screen.
2. Looks and stand. The stand has a good range of up, down, tilt and swivel adjustments. The screen can be used Portrait and landscape. Everything has a fluid motion and feels well made.
3. Connecting up. The connectors all point downwards and do what was intended of them. No problems inserting the provided Displaylink, audio and power cables.
4. Configuring. The monitor was recognised immediately and I was able to easily set everything up in W10 - 150% scaling, 4k and 60Hz.
5. Picture Quality. I've not really had time to give a considered opinion but have run a few UHD videos, Photoshop and a couple of games. There are no obvious signs of ghosting, backlight bleed is imperceptible and colours look realistic without need for calibration. Whites appear a little grey but I will likely be able to correct it in settings. This is my 3rd IPS monitor and I have no complaints with this one.
6. Sound. The speakers are VERY tinny. Probably the worst monitor speakers I have come across. Maybe I can adjust it in settings but not very impressive.
Obviously the above comments are very much first impressions. However, it's looking something of a bargain at the moment.
Latest comments (33)
What is the width of the bezel on this?
Just want to know if it will look symmetrical with my other 27 inch
IPS is excellent for like 99% of gaming in most cases.
I dont know if these use the same power supplies, but i would assume they do, and if you get this problem the best way to fix it is just to buy a replacement supply off amazon.
If it's still going badly I drop down to 50Hz which leaves me some headroom (MGS V / GTA V / Forza Horizon 3 / BF1). Yet despite all that messing around I end up playing Rocket League most of the time...
Thanks
What's the general feeling on Acer monitors these days though? Historically they used to rate lower than Asus, LG, etc and with a lot of variation between models... so it was hard to identify the good ones.
BT did a similar deal a month ago and it got reasonably warm but with little feedback on quality.
1. Assembly, pretty easy. Once everything was unpacked, it took less than 3 minutes to assemble the stand and attach the screen.
2. Looks and stand. The stand has a good range of up, down, tilt and swivel adjustments. The screen can be used Portrait and landscape. Everything has a fluid motion and feels well made.
3. Connecting up. The connectors all point downwards and do what was intended of them. No problems inserting the provided Displaylink, audio and power cables.
4. Configuring. The monitor was recognised immediately and I was able to easily set everything up in W10 - 150% scaling, 4k and 60Hz.
5. Picture Quality. I've not really had time to give a considered opinion but have run a few UHD videos, Photoshop and a couple of games. There are no obvious signs of ghosting, backlight bleed is imperceptible and colours look realistic without need for calibration. Whites appear a little grey but I will likely be able to correct it in settings. This is my 3rd IPS monitor and I have no complaints with this one.
6. Sound. The speakers are VERY tinny. Probably the worst monitor speakers I have come across. Maybe I can adjust it in settings but not very impressive.
Obviously the above comments are very much first impressions. However, it's looking something of a bargain at the moment.
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