One of the IPS monitor has a great standard performance and at reasonable prices. Today, HP presents HP ZR30w LCD IPS monitor. Its 10-bit per color per pixel (HP defines this as 30 bits per pixel) S-IPS panel is capable of displaying a staggering 1.07 billion colours with a 2,560 x 1,600 resolution at 16:10 aspect ratio and 7 ms Response time. HP ZR30w IPS monitor covers 100 percent of sRGB gamut and 99 percent of Adobe RGB color. Sure, its Viewing angle is 178° horizontal and 178° vertical.
HP ZR30w LCD IPS monitor is an S-IPS monitor that has a connection of the USB to 5 ports.
The ZR30w IPS Monitor has connectors for USB hub with up to 5 ports, DVI-D and DisplayPort, there’s HDCP support on both of these. But, the display isn’t HDMI port. Its Bezel color is Black.
HP ZR30w LCD IPS monitor is designed to be environmentally friendly, and you panic.
The ZR30w LCD IPS Monitor is surprising that the HP cares details about the environment. They chose to use a casing made from 25% recycled resin. And, this LCD IPS monitor has an 85% efficient power supply, while the low power panel is more efficient than previous models. You can adjust provides tilt, swivel, and height adaptability in the column with a 6-way adjustable stand. But it’s limited and you can’t pivot it into portrait mode. You can solve these problems by you buy some other VESA mount or articulated arm.
HP ZR30w LCD IPS Monitor is available now and price starts from $1,167.99 at amazon.com. If you are interested, you can find more information by visiting www.hp.com.
Review by cnet.com
The good: The HP ZR30w has excellent performance, high brightness, and ample USB connections.
The bad: The HP ZR30w lacks an OSD, limiting its adjustability. Also, compared with other 30-inch monitors, the ZR30w is missing many video connection options.
The bottom line: The HP ZR30w lacks too many features to be competitive with other, lower-priced 30-inchers.
Read the full review by visiting reviews.cnet.com/monitors
Review by pcpro.co.uk
HP’s new flagship monitor is a sight to behold, and beneath its sleek good-looks lies the kind of performance to make any PC owner go weak at the knees. Its 10-bit IPS panel is capable of displaying a staggering 1.07 billion colours – if you have a 10-bit workstation-class graphics card, that is – and is partnered with a 2,560 x 1,600 resolution. HP also claims the monitor covers 99% of the Adobe RGB colour space.
Alas, it offers none of the high-end features of many of its professional competitors. There’s no onscreen display, nor programmable look-up tables to allow for hardware calibration. The front-mounted buttons do nothing more than flick between the DVI and DisplayPort inputs, adjust brightness, engage dynamic contrast and turn the monitor on and off.
Read the full review by visiting www.pcpro.co.uk/reviews/monitors
Read the full review by visiting www.pcpro.co.uk/reviews/monitors
Review by maximumpc.com
Fit for a Dream Machine
You might recall seeing three of HP’s ZR30w 30-inch displays gracing the cover of our September “Dream Machine” issue. Considering our theme for that build was raw, wanton power, picking the ZR30w was an easy decision.
We haven’t been this wowed by a display since we laid eyes on NEC’s LCD3090 WQXi, which we reviewed in our March 2010 issue. But that 30-incher costs nearly twice as much as this one. Both monitors are based on S-IPS panels, as all the best LCD monitors are, and both deliver native resolution of 2560x1600 (a 16:10 aspect ratio). But the ZR30w’s real claim to fame is color resolution of 10 bits per color per pixel (HP defines this as 30 bits per pixel), which enables it to produce 1.07 billion displayable colors. That’s 100 percent of the sRGB color gamut and 99 percent of the Adobe RGB color gamut.
Read the full review by visiting www.maximumpc.com
Review by hothardware.com
Good:
- Competitively priced for a 30-inch panel
- Excellent S-IPS panel
- Great viewing angle
- Easy to rotate, pivot, and adjust the height
Bad:
- No OSD
- Lacks Portrait mode
- Only two conectors (DVI and DisplayPort)
Read the full review by visiting hothardware.com
The 30” segment of the LCD market demands the best of the best. It’s indisputably the ring in which every manufacturer wages battle with its flagship monitor. Solid execution here usually translates to solid performance for smaller size panels in the same lineup. Suffice it to say that HP’s 30 inch ZR series successor to the LP3065 doesn’t disappoint.
We would’ve liked to see just a bit more color accuracy, but the tradeoff for a dramatically bigger gamut is a good one to make. The ZR30w blew past the advertised 99% of AdobeRGB, coming in at just over 111% of the volume. It’s important to note that HP likely means coverage overlap of 99%, which the ZR30w does meet. But heck, having a volume bigger than the AdobeRGB volume is more notable. In person, the ZR30w is impressive all around. It’s bright, contrasty, and has colors that put my daily use monitors and others I’ve got laying around to shame; not an easy thing to do.
Read the full review by visiting www.anandtech.com