Grayscale, color fidelity, saturation and gamut to factory settings
The P2510S can certainly be more than just fast. Thanks to the built-in IPS panel, it can also reproduce quite crisp colors. The first impression was not bad at all and ultimately the measurement results even surprised me a little.
Color space coverage
The BOE panel delivers sRGB and DCI-P3, which is generally sufficient for a gaming monitor.
Titan P2520S Color Space
Gray Scale, Saturation, ColorChecker @ Default Settings (10 % APL)
Titan P2520S Default Color Performance
Gray Scale, Saturation, ColorChecker @ OSD sRGB-Mode (10 % APL)
Titan P2520S sRGB Profile
Gray Scale, Saturation, ColorChecker @ OSD DCI-P3 Mode (10 % APL)
Titan P2520S DCI-P3 Profile
Interim Conclusion
A factory calibration does not jump out at you out of the box. However, the sRGB and P3 mode with an avg. dE < 2 can be classified as really good. At least you can reproduce sRGB content such as YouTube etc. quite faithfully. The maximum dE values are mainly due to the somewhat excessive restriction of the color spaces in the blue range. Added to this is the poor RGB balance, which can also be improved in the OSD for sRGB and P3 mode. And we’ll definitely take a look at that.
- 1 - Introduction, Features and Specs
- 2 - Workmanship and Details
- 3 - How we measure: Equipment and Methods
- 4 - Pixel Response Times
- 5 - Display Latencies
- 6 - Color-Performance @ Default Settings
- 7 - Direct Comparison and Power Consumption
- 8 - Color-Performance calibrated
- 9 - HDR-Performance
- 10 - Summary and Conclusion
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