One massive issue I find with OLEDs is that they tend to clip shadows. There's not enough range between the minimal brightness of the pixel and it being turned off so any dark details are just gone. There were threads about this on Reddit where users compared how much more detail you can see on an IPS vs OLED, and you could barely see anything in certain movies on OLEDs.
You're absolutely right. However, the newer OLED panels are getting much better with details in shadows. Still, the difference in contrast vs IPS can lead to discrepancy between your work vs your client's perspective of your work. If you're mostly dealing with digital content and your clients watch your videos on their phones, working on an OLED screen would still be completely fine.
Great video! I"m on the market looking for an additional monitor to my existing dual 24" Dell U2417H set up for office work and photo editing too. How do you feel about the new IPS Black monitors? I'm considering between the Dell U3223QE / BenQ PD3225U, but feeling overwhelmed by jargon so grateful for your thoughts on this! Thanks
With IPS Black you get more contrast (the biggest weakness of IPS compared to OLED) and a wider viewing angle which makes it great for work if you got people coming over and viewing your work occasionally.
What connection you are using for this monitor, I found out my PA27CV will be limited to 8bit when using hdmi connection With 165hz , now you can view your render time in higher rate Xd
If I'm not mistaken, the PA27CV is a native 8 bit panel that can achieve 10 bit via FRC. It has a HDMI 2.0 port so it shouldn't limit your color bit depth. Maybe check your display driver settings. I dunno.
Hm... The only thjng i can say is that if you're grading on an IPS panel with no mini LED, just bump up your contrast about 5-15% above what you think looks right. Even when an IPS monitor is color accurate and properly calibrated, it tend to have less contrast vs OLED miniLED IPS panels.