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Guru3D.com » News » I-O Data LCD-MF275XPBR 27-Inch Full HD Monitor

I-O Data LCD-MF275XPBR 27-Inch Full HD Monitor

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 10/25/2013 09:54 AM | source: | 8 comment(s)
I-O Data LCD-MF275XPBR 27-Inch Full HD Monitor

I-O Data has unveiled another one of its upcoming Full HD monitor, the LCD-MF275XPBR. Adopting a PLS panel, this new 27-inch LED-backlight monitor provides 1920 x 1080 Full HD resolution, 1000:1 contrast ratio, 300 cd/m2 brightness, 8.3ms response time and 178/178 degree viewing angles.

In addition, it also comes with two built-in 1.5W stereo speakers and has D-Sub, DVI-D and HDMI connectors. The LCD-MF275XPBR will go on sale from mid-November for unannounced price yet.

Compatible models DOS / V machine, Apple Macintosh series  
Supported OS This does not depend on the OS (Japanese only) 
※ However, the frequency and resolution is applied to the corresponding table range.
Specification ● LCD panel: TFT27 inch wide LED / non-glossy panel / PLS panel ● maximum display resolution: 1920 × 1080 
● Viewing angle: up and down: 178 ° left and right: 178 ° 
● video input terminal: HDMI, Analog RGB, digital HDCP compatible DVI-D 
● Audio input: Stereo mini jack φ3.5 
● Speaker: 1.5W +1.5 W (stereo) 
● phone jack: stereo mini jack φ3.5 
● Power: Max at 31W, (on mode) 19.3W, 0.2W standby during normal use 
● height adjustment: ● VESA Mount Interface Yes No: ○ (100mm pitch) 
● Dimensions (W × D × H): (Yes stand) 644 × 174 × 436mm 
● Mass: (with stand) 6.1kg 
● Operating temperature: 0 ℃ ~ 40 ℃ 
● Operating humidity conditions: (non-condensing) 20% to 80% 
● Various Approvals: VCCI Class B, J-Moss Green Mark, RoHS Directive-compliant, Energy Star, Green Purchasing Law, Electrical Appliance and Material Safety Law (PSE) 
● Warranty: including backlight and three years ※ LCD panel
Attached article Manual (including warranty), analog RGB cable (1.8m), audio cable (1.8m), Power cord (1.8m)




I-O Data LCD-MF275XPBR 27-Inch Full HD Monitor I-O Data LCD-MF275XPBR 27-Inch Full HD Monitor I-O Data LCD-MF275XPBR 27-Inch Full HD Monitor




« AOC Announces Three 16:10 Monitors · I-O Data LCD-MF275XPBR 27-Inch Full HD Monitor · Download MSI Afterburner 3.0.0 Beta 16 »

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nvgrim
Member



Posts: 46
Joined: 2005-08-16

#4683794 Posted on: 10/25/2013 05:27 PM
ugh i wish companies would get off the 1080p bandwagon and jump on the 1440/1600p one.

ClexRex
Member



Posts: 88
Joined: 2013-09-27

#4684485 Posted on: 10/26/2013 01:10 PM
Wonder why they aren't??? I mean 1440p is the thing now period...heck I even got my mom oneearly this year for her home desktop and she loves it couple with a cheap old 50$ 1gb gpu lol I got her the Qnix one like mine which is now being sold by Newegg lol the Korean panels are around 300$ common now 1080p go home lol

thatguy91
Senior Member



Posts: 6643
Joined: 2010-08-27

#4684529 Posted on: 10/26/2013 02:13 PM
It's because 1440P still costs more. Yes, it's true you can get those Korean monitors for not a bad price (although I would have had to pay more for that than I did mine). Some of them are comparatively fairly expensive, they vary on Ebay from around AUS$400 to some ridiculous prices that you won't believe unless you looked them up yourself.

I paid AUS$299 for my Benq GW2760HS monitor, which has the AMVA+ panel, 3000:1 native contrast, and flicker free non-pwm backlight. I very nearly went and bought one of those Korean 1440P monitors until I saw one a friend had (a Catleap Q271). It's true the resolution was quite impressive, but it just didn't seem right playing games. Also I was thinking 94W is fairly high power usage, the screen got warm to the touch. Thinking of the fact that in summer I'll be using it in a fairly warm room... my Benq is cool to the touch.

There were just other aspects of it that I didn't like so much, especially since I would have had to pay a fair bit more for it. Instead, I put that money towards getting a better video card (upgraded to a R9-280x from a HD7870). You do need a good card to run 1440P. I must admit though, I wouldn't go any higher than 27 inch on 1080P for a monitor, but I don't find it bad to use. Besides that, my friend with the Catleap admitted that if he were to buy a new monitor now and had the choice, he'd go for the Benq because the picture looks excellent (in many ways better than the Catleap), and comparatively significantly cheaper.

The only thing with the GW2760HS, like many other monitors, you do need to tweak it a bit to your liking.

ClexRex
Member



Posts: 88
Joined: 2013-09-27

#4684579 Posted on: 10/26/2013 03:29 PM
I agree its still above the 300$ range whiuch is above what most prefer to pay...anyways having had 120hz/144hz asus/benq and also a pb248q 1440p and now using the qnix 120hz 1440p I can flat out say the qnix at 120hz is frakin amazing and until you've played 1440p at 120hz the diff from 1080p 120hz is very large imo and I will never be going back to 1080p anything hz lol.

But anyways I also find the colors on the ips panel very easy to view for a long time and having the 1440p monitor at 120hz vs 60hz is massive even without the lightboost stuff its still a large leap imo on image and overall quality.

Also yes the Korean panels can get hot at 120hz but they will still last for sevral years and if it dies just replace the chip in the back and done...because its going to be awhile before any 1440p 120hz monitors hit the shelfs in America

thatguy91
Senior Member



Posts: 6643
Joined: 2010-08-27

#4684600 Posted on: 10/26/2013 04:03 PM
120 Hz 1440P is really only beneficial if your graphics card can do more than around 72 fps at 1440P, with the graphics settings maxed out (no point not maxing them out if you're worrying about 1440P). The reason why I say 72 Hz is because many 60 Hz monitors can do more than 60 Hz with a bit of tweaking (check specs). I'm running mine at 72 Hz. That 72 Hz is still a 20 percent increase.

I'm not saying the monitors aren't amazing for what they are, just that in some scenarios their perceived benefit can be greatly reduced. This will probably change again if they ever update to AH-IPS panels.

I also forgot to point out the Q271 my friends has doesn't work at 120Hz, he had to settle for 65 Hz (I just checked with him on MSN/Skype, thought it was 85 Hz). Of course, the other concern is warranty since they have a slightly higher incidence of failure than other brands like Asus, BenQ, LG, Samsung etc. If you want 120 Hz 1440P with these monitors, you have to get very specific models.

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