LG 34UM67: UltraWide FreeSync Review
by Jarred Walton on March 31, 2015 3:00 PM ESTLG 34UM67 Introduction and Overview
LG as a company has many products and certainly offers some strong competition. Their product line includes HDTVs and computer displays, smartphones and smart watches, fitness bands, home appliances, audio accessories, commercial AC and lighting, and numerous other offerings; in short, LG is a brand we’ve all encountered. Given their strong presence in the HDTV market over the years, computer displays should be a strong category for LG, and with one of the first shipping FreeSync displays, LG is at the front of the pack as far as new technologies are concerned. But being first doesn’t necessarily mean being best.
As the first FreeSync display to cross our desks, the LG 34UM67 has some good and bad elements. In many ways it feels like the larger version of the LG 29EA93 we reviewed a while back, albeit in an improved design and with most of the early 21:9 issues having been ironed out. The price is also lower now, so for less money you can get a more capable 34” display instead of 29”. But with FreeSync being the marquee feature, the supported refresh rates of 48-75 Hz can be something of a problem.
But let’s not jump too far ahead. Fundamentally this is a computer display, so let’s talk about the design, features, and other elements before we continue. After testing the two previous TN-based G-SYNC displays, the Acer XB280HK and the ASUS ROG Swift PG278Q, the change back to an IPS panel is immediately noticeable. From an ideal viewing location it may not matter as much, but get off axis at all and IPS is definitely superior. The color quality also looks quite good out of the box – not sufficient for professional use, perhaps, but definitely better than most lesser panels.
In terms of connectivity, LG includes multiple input options: DisplayPort, HDMI, and dual-link DVI-D are present. There are also two 7W downward facing speakers in the screen, with audio in/out ports on the back. One thing you won’t find however are any USB ports. The built-in stand likewise offers no height adjustment, rotate, or swivel – the only thing you can do is tilt it forward/backward. There is a 100x100mm VESA mount, however, so the stand at least can be replaced. From an ergonomics perspective, the built-in stand isn’t very good, but it does at least provide a good level of support (which is often an issue on budget displays).
Power is provided via a power brick, which is unfortunate and likely unnecessary – the bulk of the display should have easily allowed for placing the power circuit inside the chassis. There are also no cable routing features, so all the wires simply connect directly into the back of the display above the stand hinge.
Moving to the OSD (On Screen Display), LG offers plenty of options. The controls consist of a 4-way nub located at the bottom-center of the panel, and while it might not seem ideal I didn’t find it to be particularly problematic either. The nub also serves as the power button if you press it when outside of the OSD menus. All of the usual settings are present, including various color modes, brightness/contrast, the ability to tune the RGB output (and even a more advanced option that allows adjustment of six colors (Red, Green, Blue, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow – both hue and saturation can be altered), and input selection.
Areas where LG adds extras to the OSD include the PBP (Picture Beside Picture) mode, where you can do a split screen view while using two connections, gaming modes designed to improve (in theory) pixel response times and reduce input lag (DAS aka Dynamic Action Sync), and of course the option to enable/disable FreeSync. I don’t know why it’s necessary to inherently provide the option to disable FreeSync, though – if your GPU doesn’t support the standard, the display should simply function as normal with a static refresh rate.
I want to note that the DAS mode and FreeSync actually caused problems on at least one occasion, as the first time I booted with the display connected FreeSync was disabled and when I turned it on the screen went black and never came back on – I had to restart the PC but then things worked properly. DAS did the same thing when I turned it off at one point, though this time power cycling the display fixed the issue. After that, DAS mode was grayed out, and it’s not clear why that’s the case. Disabling FreeSync didn’t allow me to change DAS mode, but switching to one of the preset picture modes other that Custom brought back the option to change the DAS mode.
It looks like there’s are a few minor bugs in the display firmware, but personally I tend to set up a display and then rarely change things, so it’s not a huge concern. If you happen to regularly tweak the OSD settings on your display, however, you might find the current 34UM67 OSD to be a bit irritating. I also missed the option to adjust the OSD timeout; it's about 20 seconds with no way to make it any longer. As it stands, it’s neither the best nor the worst OSD menu that I’ve encountered, and in general it does what it needs to do.
LG 34UM67 Specifications | |
Video Inputs | 1x DisplayPort 1.2a 1x HDMI 1.3 1x DL-DVI |
Panel Type | IPS |
Pixel Pitch | 0.312mm x 0.310mm |
Colors | 16.7 Million |
Brightness | 300 cd/m2 |
Contrast Ratio | Not Specified (>600:1 measured) |
Response Time | 14ms |
Viewable Size | 34" |
Resolution | 2560x1080 |
Viewing Angle (H/V) | 176 / 176 |
Backlight | White LED |
Power Consumption (operation) | 53W Typical |
Power Consumption (standby) | <0.5W |
Screen Treatment | Anti-Glare |
Height-Adjustable | No |
Tilt | Yes, -5 to 15 degrees |
Pivot | Yes |
Swivel | Yes |
VESA Wall Mounting | Yes, 100mm x 100mm |
Dimensions w/ Base (WxHxD) | 830mm x 469mm x 173mm |
Weight | 7.3kg |
Additional Features | 2 x 7W speakers Audio in/out |
Limited Warranty | 2 Years |
Accessories | AC Power Brick DisplayPort Cable HDMI Cable |
Price | $649 MSRP |
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xthetenth - Wednesday, April 1, 2015 - link
For working purposes I would not consider a 16:x 4k an upgrade from 3440x1440 at all. I would be trading sufficient x space to have a third item up or a wide item and a narrow one up at the same time in return for a small amount of y space that doesn't make a meaningful difference. Past roughly 1200 pixels tall, 21:9 is by far the best aspect ratio for work. By 1200 pixels, there's plenty of y space that added information by increasing y space is facing seriously diminishing returns, while x space is starting to go from two pretty wide windows to three windows side by side, which is still giving significant returns.Of the current selection of monitors, I would definitely choose 3440x1440 to keep for 5 years, and spending that much tends to come with a very nice, calibrated screen. A $300-$400 2560x1440 isn't the same quality screen.
wweeii - Tuesday, March 31, 2015 - link
Theoretically even if you drop below 48hz it shouldn't be all bad.Between 16 and 24 fps, you can just triple the refresh rate, 48-75hz would work just fine without tearing.
Between 24 and 37 fps, you double the refresh rate, so no problem either.
You would only have a problem between 37 to 48 FPS, which is unfortunate.
Soulwager - Tuesday, March 31, 2015 - link
But AMD isn't doing that, and the VRR window is too small to do window shifting. If you want to display every frame on time you need a max frame interval needs to be greater than your frametime variance plus double the minimum frame interval.Soulwager - Tuesday, March 31, 2015 - link
You can test input lag with inexpensive hardware, for example, an arduino with native USB that emulates a mouse input and measures a subsequent brightness change with a photoresistor.Ryan Smith - Tuesday, March 31, 2015 - link
If you could, please shoot me an email.Soulwager - Tuesday, March 31, 2015 - link
Done.OrphanageExplosion - Wednesday, April 1, 2015 - link
Is there a link with an explanation for this somewhere so we can all take a look at this idea?Soulwager - Thursday, April 2, 2015 - link
Yes, here's a forum post: http://forums.blurbusters.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&a...jjj - Tuesday, March 31, 2015 - link
This gave me an idea, a Cypress PSoC board instead of Arduino could also work and maybe you could make a similar device to test touch responsiveness in phones and tabs. Cypress makes touch controllers so maybe they would help you out with some coding to enable you to test touch responsiveness. You could at least try. Guess Arduino started with Atmel chips and Atmel is also one of the major touch controller players so you could try to ask for their help too.cbrownx88 - Tuesday, March 31, 2015 - link
Yes - please email him! lol