Input and Processing Latency

So I was super late on getting the input latency section done, my sincere apologies if you've been refreshing endlessly every day as one day turned into an additional three. The delay was no fault of the PA301w, it was entirely just the sheer amount of stuff being worked on behind the scenes during just another busy week at AnandTech. Enough with my excuses though, let's get on to the results.

Processing and input lag are both serious considerations for gamers, but also noticeable after a certain point doing even the most mundane of desktop productivity tasks. It's that nagging - something feels off - sensation that really drains on one after a while. We've been doing our best to characterize input latency so far by doing some real world tests alongside CRTs. First with a 17" Princeton, then a Sony G520 20" CRT. The results so far have actually shown a fair amount of variance in input latency. 

I measured latency on the PA301w the same way we've done it in the past. I run the 3DMark06 wings of fury demo on loop, and take photos of the display in test alongside a mirrored CRT at shutter speeds at or faster than 1/160th of a second. Resolution is set at XGA so we can crank the refresh all the way up on both displays (on the PA301w that's 75 Hz at XGA, 60 Hz at native). I snap a bunch of photos, and average a ton that show the difference in frame number between the two, and through some math we can get a decently accurate feel for what input latency is like. 

You won't find it in the normal OSD, but in the Advanced OSD the PA301w has an interesting option labeled "Response Improve," which I can only assume is essentially overdrive control. I tested with this set to on and off, and found something interesting:

Processing Lag Comparison (By FPS)

Remember that I'm driving both the CRT and PA301w at 75 Hz. At that refresh rate, one frame is 13.33 ms, two frames is 26.66 ms. Given how close those numbers are to the measured times, it looks like turning response improve on adds one more frame of latency. Interestingly enough, the difference between response improve turned on and off is actually visually noticeable. With response improve on, the numbers I read out of super fast shutter images of the PA301w are crisp and readable. With response improve off, almost 50% were lost to two frames being present and making it hard to discern the numbers. This is again the tradeoff you make - better panel response and less ghosting through overdrive, but at the cost of some additional processing latency if you look at it with a camera. I spent some time playing the Crysis 2 multiplayer demo and couldn't detect any latency subjectively with the setting on or off - you're a better gamer than I if you can pick that 10 ms difference out in actual practice.

Custom Refresh Rates

Ganesh (our resident HTPC expert) has also been asking me to add some custom refresh rate testing to our display review suite. Refresh rates like 23.976, 24, 25, 29.97, 50, and 59.94 Hz. I entered the custom refresh rates into the NVIDIA Control Panel and tested them on my GTX 470. All of the above refresh rates were supported at 1920x1080, which is the most likely place to encounter a bunch of those. The OSD appears to round appropriately for all refresh rates but 59.94, which it displays as 59.9 Hz. Curiously enough 23.976 Hz displays as 24 Hz, but displays just fine. 

Brightness Uniformity Power Consumption and Final Thoughts
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  • mbaroud - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 - link

    When i saw the title, i thought, wow, this must be a really bad monitor.
    After reading the review, it looks like it is THE BEST with except of weight and dimensions.

    Could you please change title, its misleading.
  • LTG - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 - link

    It's an American coloquialism instantly recognized by most who lived there whole lives here.

    That said, there is a lot of word play in journalism I don't get and is a little frustrating when it happens to me so I understand your point.
  • Mumrik - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 - link

    Ever heard of "The Baddest Man of the Planet"?

    This is a very normal way to put it. Nothing wrong with the title.
  • Zoomer - Friday, March 18, 2011 - link

    Given the international audience anandtech serves, he has a point.
  • Soulkeeper - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 - link

    CCFL Backlight
    165 watts (typical)
    41.5 lbs (18.8 kg)
    2560 x 1600 at 60 Hz

    Might as well just get a 21" CRT with those specs and price ...
  • Nentor - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 - link

    I am sitting in front of a 21" CRT that I am still reluctant to pass on (Sony GDM F520) and those weigh around 35 kg / 77 lbs. It can only do 2048x max.
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 - link

    We had this discussion on one of the previous 30" monitor reviews. While LEDs backlights are lower power than CCFLs and have won most of the mobile market, and while LEDs can surpass the gamut and color accuracy of midrange CCFLs at an acceptable price premium and are winning the consumer display market, the best RGB LED backlights still cannot beat the gamut and color accuracy of the best CCFL backlights. Until that happens (or until consumer demand becomes large enough to sell a less capable low power model) displays aimed directly at the professional market will continue to use CCFL backlighting despite the higher power consumption.

    The final point I'd make is that the "typical" power consumption NEC lists is a worst case number. Depending on brightnesss Brian measured 58-136 watts, and like most modern LCDs the maximum brightness levels are too high to use comfortably outside of an exceptionally bright area (because otherwise they'd be too dim in places), so you won't be running it at maximum brightness unless you're working outside in the desert.
  • Breit - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 - link

    Not exactly right i guess. Every now and then there are some good RGB LED monitors in the news (at least on paper)... e.g. the LaCie 730 (http://www.lacie.com/products/product.htm?pid=1109... I don't know for sure if its any good 'cause i only have a poor Dell U3011 on my desk, but who knows?! ;)
  • AnnonymousCoward - Tuesday, March 1, 2011 - link

    I'll pass going into detail about how insane you are.
  • Griswold - Wednesday, March 2, 2011 - link

    You should have passed the test for "Professional display equipment 101" instead.

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