

#Benq bl3201ph clicking flickery drivers#
The monitor ships with HDMI, DisplayPort, and USB (upstream) cables, the hockey puck controller, and a resource CD containing drivers and a user guide. This monitor doesn't have the individual six-color Hue and Saturation settings that you get with the BenQ PV3200PT and the Dell U3417W, but it does have two sliders for increasing or decreasing overall Hue and Saturation levels.īenQ covers the PD3200U with a three-year warranty on parts, labor, and backlight. It also has a light meter and a timer that reminds you to rest your eyes, as well as a presence sensor that puts the monitor into sleep mode when you're not there. As with the BenQ PV3200PT, the PD3200U contains an Ergonomic menu with an Eye Protect setting that uses an embedded sensor to detect ambient light levels and adjust screen brightness.
#Benq bl3201ph clicking flickery windows#
There's also a DualView feature that lets you view two windows side by side using two different picture modes. 709, sRGB, CAD/CAM, Animation, Standard, Low Blue Light, Darkroom, and User Defined. In addition to Brightness, Contrast, Sharpness, and Color Temperature settings, you can choose one of eight Picture Modes, including REC. You get a good selection of settings with the PD3200U.

The embedded 5-watt speakers are loud and offer a smattering of bass, but they can't stand up to the 9-watt speakers that come with the Dell U3417W. It has a 16:9 aspect ratio, a 1,000:1 native contrast ratio, a 4-millisecond (gray-to-gray) pixel response, and a 350 cd/m 2 peak brightness. The 10-bit IPS panel has a maximum resolution of 3,840 by 2,160 and covers 100 percent of the sRGB and REC.709 color gamut. All of the USB ports can be configured to work with the internal KVM switch, which allows you to share the monitor and a single keyboard and mouse between two PCs. As we saw with the BenQ PV3200PT ($1,299.00 at BenQ), the controller can be tricky the four-way inner ring used to maneuver up, down, left, and right is thin and can lead to accidental settings changes if you're not careful. Just below are two USB 3.0 downstream ports and a headphone jack.Īt the back of the cabinet are three additional USB 3.0 ports (one upstream and two downstream) and a connector for the included hockey puck controller, which sits in a cradle at the base of the stand and allows you to change settings and assign hot keys for switching picture modes. Port placement is a bit different from most monitors the two full-size HDMI inputs and two DisplayPort inputs (full size and mini) are mounted on the right side of the cabinet rather than around back.

It also has four VESA mounting holes for use with an optional wall-mounting kit. It uses a matte-black cabinet with half-inch bezels, and comes with a rectangular stand that provides height, tilt, swivel, and pivot adjustments.

The PD3200U ($699.00 at Amazon) shares the same basic design as the BenQ PV3200PT and the BenQ B元201PH ($677.00 at Amazon). In addition to an Ultra-High-Definition (UHD) In-Plane Switching (IPS) panel that performed wonderfully in our tests, this pricey business monitor offers numerous graphics-centric picture modes, a fully adjustable stand, a built-in KVM switch, and an SD card reader. Designed for CAD/CAM users, content creators, and other graphics professionals, the 32-inch BenQ PD3200U ($899) packs a wealth of features into its extra-large frame.
