Отзывы о Монитор Acer SA270Bbmipux
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Just FYI for all of you, to turn it on, you have to flip a switch, and push a power button to get it running, this was very confusing for me and I thought the monitor had come broken right out of the box.
- 27"
- 75Hz
- adjustable height
- price
- Bluelight filter
The bluelight filter can be confusing. When it's "OFF", it means no bluelight filtering, rather than no bluelight! The lowest you can get is 50% bluelight passing. The higher that % means more bluelight passing through. They should really change that settings for better interpretability!!
Two problems:
1. Two screws fall off inside the monitor, not sure who to blame : Poor assembly quality or brutal shipping ( via UPS Ground) , the Box is slightly damaged at the corner.
2. Counter intuitive Power buttonS: I thought this is an DOA, and ready to return after half an hour without luck to power on. Fortunately I read user comments and learned there are two power buttons ( nowadays most LCD display has no power buttons at all), and user manual is not clear.
Other than that great monitor, speaker quality is not very good but I don't need it.
I had been working from home from a laptop screen for several weeks before I made the switch and, after the one day it took me to get used to the huge size difference, I am very happy with the product. It has allowed me to be much more productive.
I'm an Appraiser, and I used to work using two regular monitor to be more productive and get more information accessible. Right now, I can split my monitor in three screen (with a third party software), and get more information available while working. It's a whole different thing in productivity. For $349.99, I can't complain at all. Can't tell you about the stand because I bought a "NB Monitor Desk Mount Full Motion Swivel Monitor Arm with Gas Spring" and I can swivel mine as I want.
I hooked up my XBox One X and was great, but... XBox doesn't support Cinematic Aspect Ratio (21:9) so graphic are stretched all the way to the side. Isn't a monitor issue, is Microsoft not providing support for this monitor size. If you can afford to pay over $700 + for a better monitor, go for it. However, if you're looking for monitor, with decent view angle, acceptable brightness with no bleeding, with a little bit more than typical 60hz, VESA support, different input alternative at less than $400, this one is for you (at least is for me).
The replacement monitor had the same issue so I figured it was me and hired my IT guy to come and show me what I must have been doing wrong. He could not ,it did not work either. So now I'm out an hour pay to the IT guy and still no monitor. So Amazon was real good about returning it but I needed a monitor not all these headaches.
Ended up buying one from a local store and it worked as soon as I plugged it in.
Height adjustable stand was also a must. My setup has different uses, normal gaming, and sim racing. I needed to be able to lower and raise all my monitors depending on what I'm doing at the time. I previously used a triple monitor VESA stand to hold all of my monitors, but it was bolted to it's height, and in order to change it I had to remove the monitors, unbolt it, adjust it, bolt it back together, put the monitors back on. That was just too much work, so in order to simplify things I decided having each monitor on it's own stand that they could easily be moved. These raise and lower very easily, and hold their height with no issue.
I've read a lot of reviews complaining about the screen door effect. That's something you're going to get with this resolution at this size. The individual pixels are larger than a 1440p or 4k panel, so if you look close enough you can see those individual pixels. I personally don't have a problem with this, sure I can see it if I get close enough to the monitor, but at a foot away or more, it disappears. If you're using your monitor that close, you may want to change how you do things.
Calibrating the monitors to match my ultrawide did take some work, out of the box the settings were pretty bad. I used a combination of getting it as close as I could with the monitor settings, then fine-tuned it in the Nvidia Control Panel. This would be easier to dial in with a screen calibration tool, but I was able to match them all pretty close just by eyeballing it. Both monitors match at the same settings, so that was nice, being able to adjust one and simply copying the settings to the other. No fussing around trying to fine-tune them individually.
The settings I settled on:
Brightness - 100
Contrast - 50
Black Boost - 0
Blue Light - Off
ACM - Off
Super Sharpness - Off
Gamma - 2.4
Color Temp - User
R Gain - 55
G Gain - 50
B Gain - 80 (I prefer a cooler, whiter image)
All Bias - 50
I have FreeSync enabled on all monitors, and it's working fine with a 2070 Super. I'm also using Display Port on all monitors.
Nvidia Color Settings:
Use Nvidia Settings - Enabled
Settings were done under All Channels, I didn't have the need to fine tune individual channels.
Brightness - 62%
Contrast - 0%
Gamma - 0.80
Digital Vibrance - 75%
Conclusion: These monitors are a steal for the price. It has great specs, and once you tune it, a pretty good picture (I can't speak for professional work, but if that's your goal you're probably looking for something more high-end than this with better color accuracy). Add to it that you get a good height adjustable stand, with the ability to go portrait, and this is a real winner. For a gaming/general use/media consumption monitor, you can't really go wrong with this one.
I ended up using a dual monitor arm, but I did play around with the stand for a few minutes just to check it out. It rotates, tilts, and swivels. Believe it or not, this is actually uncommon. My brother still complains to me about the $200 monitor he bought last year that only tilts.
I'm someone who will do hours of research on an item so I can end up with the best product possible. This is the best monitor under $135 IMO. Definitely recommend. Freesync, IPS, good stand, low price.
Nice, sturdy base swivels, tilts, and rotates to portrait or landscape.
Good controls once you get used to them.
Has HDMI, Displayport, and the increasingly rare VGA inputs.
Audio in and out and speakers, more or less.
Freesync, and Nvidia reluctantly lets it Gsync (within its limits).
Cons:
Faint screen-door effect. Looks rather like one of those privacy screens some people use.
Speakers, more or less.
Cons:
The speakers on these are pretty much useless. At 100% they're barely audible, and project out from the bottom of the screen in horizontal mode. They're on and at 70% by default, even when nothing is plugged in. If you use a display only interface (VGA/DPort), and there's no audio plugged in, the monitor will buzz or humm occasionally. You can mute it in the menu, but honestly it should default to mute if there's no audio plugged in.
On one of the two monitors I got, the bottom right corner has a slight darker/bluish tint to it, almost like something is pressing on the screen lightly. It's a super minor defect, so I'm ignoring it for now, and hoping it's not a sign of something more going wrong with it.
As another review noted, the panel doesn't reach the edge of the display, leaving about 1/4" around the top/sides, despite the bezel being super thin. It's better then the last monitor pair I had, which had 1/2" bezel all around, but it's still there. Not unexpected, thanks to the review here, but still disappointing.
There is also a significant color delta between the two monitors, depending on it you use VGA, DPort or HDMI for input. If you change input type, you effectively have to re-color-balance the display again. Not the worst, and they give you three "modes" to save color settings into (probably just for this), but still annoying.








