More on the PA246Q CMS

As mentioned earlier, the PA246Q offers a CMS (Color Management System) to the end user in User mode. While a CMS is becoming more and more common on TVs and projectors, they are not too common on computer displays at this point. Since they aren’t too common, I’ll describe how they work a bit, and what they should do when correctly implemented.

Many of you are probably familiar with the CIE 1931 color space diagram. It shows all colors and inside you will see a triangle indicating the area of all visible colors that a monitor can display. For each color gamut, there are primary color points for Red, Green, and Blue, and a target point for White. Since we are using sRGB typically, we use D65 as a white point, which has its own xy coordinates, and then each primary color has its own xy coordinates. This is pretty easy to understand, as there is an x-axis and a y-axis on the CIE diagram.

The controls that are available to us in the PA246Q CMS are individual controls for each primary and secondary color for Hue and Saturation. Hue controls the rotation of the color point around the white point. For example, adjusting the hue moves the red from green towards blue, or from blue towards green when adjusted the other way. Saturation controls the distance from the white point. Increasing saturation moves the point from the center towards the edge of the diagram, and reducing saturation brings it inside. With these two controls you should be able to get all six color points to wind up on their target coordinates. That results in a perfect display, right? Wrong.

There is a third variable for color that isn’t visible here, and that is Y, or the luminance/light-output of the color. Each color should be a certain brightness when compared to white. Blue is around 7% of the brightness of white, Red is around 21%, and Green is around 71%. These percentages help you understand why blue color errors are less visible than green color errors, since blue is 1/10th as bright in most cases. So without this extra value to adjust, we can’t control if the luminance of an individual color is too high or too low, which can cause a tint or color shift in the image, as a certain color can be too bright relative to everything else.

Now that we have discussed that, you can see that this isn’t a full CMS as we’re missing a key control. Luminance is often considered to be more important than Hue or Saturation for the primary colors, so not having this control can make a large impact on the quality of the controls. The other thing a CMS must do is correctly calculate the values for each color based on how you calibrated the display. With the CMS all you are doing is programming in the targets for what the ideal points are, but those are six points out of one billion colors with a 10-bit display. To render the other colors correctly, the display must now take those adjustments and apply the math correctly to get the intermediate colors correct.

To be honest, most displays are really bad at this. Even $10,000 projectors have CMS systems that don’t calculate these correctly, though I’ve also seen $1,000 plasma displays with CMS systems that are spot on perfect. This is where the CMS on the ASUS falls short. While I could get the reference points to be perfect, the intermediate points were far, far off the target and led to an image that looked pretty bad. Leaving these at the default and only setting the white point led to much better results in the end. I think it is a good progression that ASUS is adding a CMS to their displays, as properly implemented it lets you get the monitor nearly perfect internally before you apply the calibration inside the graphics card. However, if the CMS doesn’t seem to work correctly, you are better off leaving it alone and then doing the calibration only in software using the video card LUT.

ASUS PA246Q - Display Uniformity ASUS PA246Q - Input Lag and Power Use
Comments Locked

52 Comments

View All Comments

  • synaesthetic - Tuesday, July 3, 2012 - link

    I'd pay a lot for a 1920x1440 24" monitor!
  • aranyagag - Tuesday, December 11, 2012 - link

    i just wish such a display was available
  • aranyagag - Tuesday, December 11, 2012 - link

    +1 for 16:10 --voted with my wallet
  • Corporate Goon - Monday, July 2, 2012 - link

    Just wanted to leave my two cents as I've owned this monitor for about six months now.

    I've generally been very impressed with this monitor - I have a wide variety of needs and I find it fits most of them. I do some semi-pro video and photography work but nothing too fancy (photoshoots for local bands, that sort of thing), play lots of games and do some Netflix watching and the like. I've been very pleased generally with the Asus display - the colours are great, and a huge step up over my TFT display I had before. I've also noticed no ghosting issues at all in games and movies (I initially replaced my 'old' 24" TFT with a BenQ MVA panel and while the contrast was incredible, the streaking and ghosting was a major distraction).

    My only major complaint about the display is the poor black levels relative to newer LED-backlit screens. Compared to my old TFT/CCFL display the Asus is about on par, but it can't hold a candle to the newer TFT/LED and MVA/LED screens.

    I've recommended the screen to a couple of friends who are in similar boats to me - people who use their computer for entertainment, but are also reasonably serious about using it for art/video/photography.
  • Leyawiin - Monday, July 2, 2012 - link

    "there is no game mode or overdrive for enabling faster response from the display"

    ASUS's term for Overdrive is Trace Free. Its permanently active in this model (can't turn it off or change the degree).
  • aranyagag - Tuesday, December 11, 2012 - link

    A very astute observation -- thanks for posting this insight
  • dishayu - Tuesday, July 3, 2012 - link

    There are so many cheap 27 inch korean IPS 2560x1440 resolution displays on ebay that sell for under $400. They utilize panels from LG, the same ones used in Apple's cinema display. I would REALLY like to see a legitimate review of them. I'm quite inclined to buy them but i don't want to end up wasting 500 of my bucks. If only Anand could review them somehow?

    Here's an ebay link. (this is the pixel perfect model, which comes with a guarantee of zero defective pixels)

    http://www.ebay.com/itm/CROSSOVER-27Q-LED-Perfect-...
  • rsgeiger - Tuesday, July 3, 2012 - link

    Basically the only way Anand can review it is if you bought it and sent it to them. They only review what companies send to them for review. They dont buy their own gear.
  • prophet001 - Tuesday, July 3, 2012 - link

    It would be nice to see a review of something like that. However, I think it's safe to say that it's not that cheap because it has the same quality as other similarly spec'd panels.
  • dishayu - Tuesday, July 3, 2012 - link

    Doesn't apple's 27 inch IPS cinema display cost something in vicinity of 1000 dollars?

    I just randomly linked this one as it was the first to turn up in my search results. There are monitors selling for around 360 mark as well. And 299 if you don't want a 0 defective pixel warranty (replacement only for 5 bad pixels or more, a couple of pixels out of 3.7 million might not even be noticable at this pixel density but i don't know that for sure)

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now