Grayscale, color fidelity, saturation and gamut to factory settings
The 34WQHD240-C is fast – that much is already clear. As we are dealing with a QD OLED panel, we will see the typical advantages and disadvantages straight away. The monitor runs at approx. 85 Rec. 2020 in the factory state and oversaturates the sRGB colors that we encounter in everyday life. Corsair has at least implemented an sRGB mode in the OSD, the color accuracy of which we naturally take a particularly critical look at.
Color space coverage
Gray Scale, Saturation, ColorChecker @ Default Settings (10 % APL)
Gray Scale, Saturation, ColorChecker @ OSD sRGB Mode (10 % APL)
Interim conclusion
You have to live with high DeltaE deviations on factory settings, but this has now become standard. At least the sRGB mode can deliver what Corsair promises – I can confirm DeltaE < 2. I can’t reproduce the values measured by Corsair!
I also like the fact that Corsair doesn’t lock the sRGB mode with regard to the RGB balance. Anyone who would like to make improvements here is welcome to do so. Due to the fact that the 34WQHD240-C can also shine with very high color space coverage, nothing stands in the way of occasional work in the color spaces: sRGB, Adobe RGB and Display P3. I’ll show you later which settings I used for my software calibration. On the next page we compare the Corsair again with my Samsung Odyssey OLED G8.
- 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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