Color-Performance, Brightness Comparison and Power Consumption
The AW3225QF ranks pretty low among the other QD OLEDs and monitors that do not run in the sRGB color space in the factory settings. In terms of maximum brightness, the AW3225QF is also slowed down a little. Only 230 nits is basically ok, but other manufacturers also manage 250 nits and more here. The reason for this is most likely an algorithm that is supposed to find and dim logos and other static content.
Brightness
Gray Scale, Saturation and ColorChecker
Power Consumption
Most of you should also be familiar with this image. A QD OLED can be quite thirsty at the power socket. Especially if you spend the whole day looking at all-white content – such as Excel spreadsheets. But you also have to see the added value, because the picture quality that a QD OLED can deliver is worth every watt in my eyes.
- 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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