![]() The stand is built in to the screen with only the foot needing attachment when you unpack everything and set it up. The total border is ~10.5mm along the sides and top, and ~12mm along the bottom edge. The 45WQHD240 comes in an all black finish with a 4 side “borderless” design with thin plastic edges, but an additional black panel border around all sides. ![]() 1x DisplayPort 1.4, 2x HDMI 2.1 and 1x USB type-C (with DP Alt mode and 30W power delivery) connections.Per pixel dimming for excellent HDR capabilities.450 cd/m 2 brightness (SDR – 25% APL) and 1000 cd/m 2 peak brightness (HDR – 3% APL).Wide colour gamut with 98.5% DCI-P3 coverage.Adaptive-sync VRR including NVIDIA ‘G-sync Compatible’ and AMD ‘FreeSync Premium’ certifications.Bendable format from flat to 800R maximum curvature.OLED panel technology (LG.Display WOLED – LW450CWQ-ARG1).45″ (44.75″ exact) ultrawide panel with 21:9 aspect ratio.This provides a great deal of flexibility for working, videos and gaming and sets this version apart from the competition so far (which are otherwise fixed curved models).Ī lot has already been made about these new OLED screens in pre-release discussion and early adopter feedback, so we plan to tackle all the key questions throughout this review – is the resolution high enough for the screen size? what is the text clarity like? How is the matte screen coating? Does the bendable format work well? Is the screen bright enough for SDR? What about HDR performance? Is it as fast as 360Hz LCD’s? Read on to find out and much more!Ĭheck pricing and availability in your regionĬorsair have a nice short video available below which gives a good overview of the product and specs: While LG and others also have their own monitors using this panel ( LG UltraGear 45GR95QE and Acer Predator X45), uniquely the Corsair screen offers a bendable screen as well! This allows you to switch between flat format, or curved, anywhere up to 800R if you want. Being OLED it offers all the usual benefits like near-instant response times (0.03ms G2G is quoted!) along with per-pixel dimming, true blacks and near-infinite contrast ratio for excellent HDR performance. ![]() This model has an ultrawide format, 21:9 aspect ratio and offers a 3440 x 1440 resolution along with the 240Hz refresh rate. We now have with us one of the first of the 45″ offerings, Corsair’s Xeneon Flex 45WQHD240. We had chance only last week to test and review the first 27″ model to market with the new OLED panel, in the form of the LG 27GR95QE. Best of all, the new panels also offer for the first time in this space, a high refresh rate at 240Hz! We found out more recently as well that these new OLED monitor were using the latest generation of META / MLA technology, giving us even more cause to be excited about their arrival. These new panels are using LG.Display’s existing WOLED technology that’s been around in the TV market for many years, but this time in a couple of sensible monitor sizes. One in a typical 27″ 16:9 format, and the other in a large 45″ ultrawide 21:9 format. You wait all that time, and two high refresh rate OLED monitor options come along at once! Towards the end of last year we were pleasantly surprised by the announcement of two desktop monitor sized OLED panels from LG.Display being developed. ![]()
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