Color performance after a full software calibration
The Titan Army P2710S leaves nothing to be desired when it comes to setting options. You can adjust everything in the OSD standard (factory settings), turning the P2710S into a real “professional device”. The very attractively priced monitor can be a very useful companion for beginners who occasionally try their luck in image editing.
OSD Setting D65 @ 200 Nits
You remain in OSD standard mode and set the brightness to level 50 (more or less the middle) and set the color temperature to User 1. You then only have to set User 1 as shown in the picture. You can see how this affects the color accuracy in the measurement logs.
CCT Corrected OSD Standard – Windows sRGB Mode
CCT Corrected Standard – DCI-P3
With very little effort, the P2710S can be transformed into a very color-faithful monitor in terms of sRGB and P3. Everyone should be more than happy with this. You can game in the P3 color space and enjoy your daily Internet consumption with the Windows sRGB profile. If you want it to be even more accurate, you need to carry out a software calibration.
Full calibration with Portrait Displays Calman Ultimate
The results speak for themselves and if you work professionally, you can also force this – on this inexpensive monitor – with the appropriate equipment. You can even work in Adobe RGB with the values achieved – not perfect, but usable.
Spectral distribution and “Eye-Safe
If you have read my last article(ASUS ProArt PA27JCV), the following picture will certainly look familiar.
Spectral distribution @ D65, 200 Nits (100 % White Window)
The peak here is at 633 nm – i.e. in the red light spectrum. In terms of eye-safe, the blue light component in the peak is around 455 nm. Unfortunately, I cannot say with certainty to what extent this can already be described as eye-safe. If necessary, the blue light component can be reduced in the OSD, but be careful, this is at the expense of color accuracy.
Uniformity
The picture uniformity is basically ok if you mainly use the monitor for gaming. The panel shows slight weaknesses in the lower left corner. Glowing or bleeding is also limited here – but this can vary from panel to panel – typical IPS.
Image errors and other issues
Apart from the weaknesses I pointed out in this article – I could not find any other problems.
Sound reproduction
There are no built-in speakers. Sound via 3.5 mm jack works.
Webcam and microphone
Are not installed. This brings us to the topic of HDR.
- 1 - Introduction, Features and Specs
- 2 - Workmanship and Details
- 3 - How we measure: Equipment and Methods
- 4 - Pixel Response Times
- 5 - Display Latencies
- 6 - Color-Performance @ Default Settings
- 7 - Direct Comparison and Power Consumption
- 8 - Color-Performance calibrated
- 9 - HDR-Performance
- 10 - Summary and Conclusion








































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