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Acer Nitro XV273K Pbmiipphzx 27" UHD 3840 x 2160 IPS AMD Radeon FreeSync and NVIDIA G-SYNC Compatible Monitor, DisplayHDR400, Quantum Dot, 144Hz, 1ms, DCI-P3 , Delta E<1, Black

  • Based on 179 reviews
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Availability: 14 left in stock
Fulfilled by Kaiser T

Arrives Jun 9 – Jun 14
Order within 9 hours and 13 minutes
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Style: FHD 144Hz


Features

  • 27" HD 4K (3840 x 2160) widescreen IPS zero frame AMD Radeon free Sync and G SYNC compatible monitor
  • Response time: 1ms VRB | refresh rate: 120Hz (overclocking to 144Hz) Using 2 Display Ports
  • 2 speakers, 4 Watts per speaker
  • Visa Certified displays 400, Quantum dot technology | DCI P3 | low Delta e<1
  • Ports: 2 x Display Port V1. 4, 2 x HDMI V2 0 & 4 x USB 3. 0 Ports (includes display port & USB cables)

Description

Fasten your seatbelt: The Nitro XV273K Ultra HD display with 4K resolution is all about no compromises on gaming performance, color or speed. This 27 inch (3840 x 2160) monitor combines jaw dropping specs including an IPS panel that supports blazing fast refresh rate. This G SYNC Compatible monitor gives you more of what you want in a gaming experience. Smooth, tear free gameplay! ! Unleash gaming's maximum potential to provide richer colors far beyond what has been previously possible. Experience something new. (UM. HX3AA. P02)


Standing screen display size: ‎27 Inches


Screen Resolution: ‎3840 x 2160


Max Screen Resolution: ‎3840 x 2160 Pixels


Number of USB 3.0 Ports: ‎4


Brand: ‎Acer


Series: ‎XV273K Pbmiipphzx


Item model number: ‎XV273K Pbmiipphzx


Item Weight: ‎14.5 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎24.76 x 12.09 x 21.3 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎24.76 x 12.09 x 21.3 inches


Color: ‎Black


Power Source: ‎AC


Manufacturer: ‎Acer


Date First Available: ‎January 28, 2019


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Jun 9 – Jun 14

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Acer Nitro XV273K Pbmiipphzx 27" UHD 3840 x 2160 IPS
Style: FHD 144Hz
Spectacular detail, colors, "speed". Best monitor I've ever spent time with. I made the jump to 4k a couple of years ago, and Windows wasn't particularly high DPI ready. but managed to deal with it. I most recently came from a 26" LG, this 27" is a beast, I have to keep it a bit further away during gaming sessions. Since I've only spent the weekend with it, I may decide on some alternate settings, but for now 4k, 120hz, HDR is the gaming route. As in any 4k environment you typically want to turn down all graphics settings that try and make lower resolutions look better, ie turn off anti-aliasing (AA). The jump to 120hz doesn't tax my gtx1080 & ryzen 7 any more than 4k@60hz. HDR: games that support it have mind blowing detail, and no discernible hit to GPU performance. Windows however (windows 10, 1903), is the village idiot at the gaming party. It is reminiscent of windows 95 and alt tabbing from a full screen game to a higher res desktop, long pause of blackness. Basically _any_ SDR element causes the entire display to switch between HDR and SDR, and it is a painful switch. Want to change your volume? that lovely stupid volume level on the top left that you can't get rid of in windows 10 is SDR...so the display will go black while windows shows you the volume level, then goes black again to go back to your game. If it wasn't so much better looking I would disable HDR, but it is, so I'm trying to deal with it. 144hz: You need two DP cables (and probably a vidcard that will support it) between vidcard and monitor. Then you need to get into the monitor OSD and find "144hz mode" and enable it. You do not get HDR mode in conjunction with 144hz mode, it is one or the other. I found my system unstable using 144hz mode. Sometimes it was just an innocuous cycling searching for input that a powercycle of the monitor would fix. Sometimes it was a system hang. The difference between 120hz and 144hz is negligible to my eyes, while the difference between 60hz and 120hz is of course amazing. I suggest 120hz for the stability, and HDR. In the box were two good DP cables. My previous cable, which I thought was good, would not carry 4k@120hz, though it did suffice for the second cable in 144hz mode. If you find you cannot get 4k@120hz, try swapping cables. VESA mount has a funky bracket shim, but it works. There is a blue LED bar on the bottom of the monitor. I haven't decided if I like it or not. I can't find an option in the OSD to turn it off though. There is (windows at least) software from acer that presumably lets one adjust all the OSD options from the comfort of your desktop. I would prefer it did not have speakers, and I would just use the mini jack pass through for headphones,. Now I have to be careful I don't wake up the household if the headphones pop out, or the bluetooth headphones go dead. But it does have speakers, and they of course are monitor speakers. Not the worst I've heard. I set the brightness in the OSD, but I am now seeing that with HDR enabled, the brightness setting is greyed out. It is a tad bright but the blacks are quite black. I'm curious as to how dual displays will play out with HDR on one, and not the other, but that will have to wait for another weekend. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2019 by rare southern califiornian coastal mountain amazonian consumer

  • 4K Gaming Monitor - With some shortfalls in HDR and poor overdrive
Style: FHD 144Hz
First things first: the out of box brightness on this panel is 450 nits. This is far too much for an IPS panel without local dimming, which is why you see all these awful black uniformity photos. I've attached two photos taken in a dim room at 20 brightness, or about 180 nits. This is about as bright as I want in SDR in this environment, and honestly it's probably still too bright for most people. Pros: - 27" 4K means PPI is very high for a desktop monitor. This has pros and cons, but for gaming, the sharpness is good. - Very high DCI-P3 coverage. The box claims 90%, but the default out of the box coverage is >95%. This lets the monitor display intense colors that normal sRGB monitors simply cannot. - Good calibration out of the box. White point is only slightly too warm. - Freesync works well on Nvidia GPUs out of the box with Gsync compatibility - Good overdrive tuning with 'Extreme' setting at 120hz and beyond... but: - Has support for backlight strobing for motion blur reduction. Normal VRB mode offers a bright and vibrant experience, unlike earlier strobing monitors that are too dim or have color issues in strobing mode. - HDR video on YT, Amazon, and other services look great once WCG enabled in Windows and HDR mode is set on the monitor (see cons on HDR though) - Can run at 144Hz 10-bit mode with two cables, but HDR/Freesync/Gsync is not available. This means you're capped at 98Hz 10-bit or 120Hz 8-bit for HDR. This means you would only use the 144Hz mode for VRB in SDR mode. - Has 2 DP and 2 HDMI ports for all your connectivity needs. - Comes with a monitor hood. It can help with reflections on the edges of the monitor. - No fan! Thanks to 4K Gsync modules, this is now a pro to be included! Cons: - IPS panel means the pixels not on the horizontal or vertical axes are worse at blocking light. This causes the corners to glow. You'll see it in a dim room when the screen is mostly black unless the monitor is set to a high brightness. - IPS panel is limited to about ~1000 contrast ratio and monitor does not have dimming. This means HDR at 400 nits can't display the dynamic range required for a great HDR experience at that brightness. I recommend reducing HDR brightness to ~30 to prevent darker shades from being blown out. This reduces the effect of highlights, but I think the trade off is worth it. - No configurable overdrive with Freesync enabled. It locks to the 'Normal' overdrive profile suitable for 48-80hz which is slightly too slow for 80-120hz. I don't notice it unless dragging something over a dark grey background, but others may be more sensitive. - Default color modes have way too high of a brightness; Switching to HDR color mode sets brightness to max! I have to reset it every time. - OSD is slow to navigate. You can mitigate with two configuration hotkeys, but that's only two keys available. Consider installing the Acer Display Widget app to control the monitor instead. - 10-bit HDR is limited to 98Hz, but this monitor doesn't have the dynamic range to make use of 10-bits luminance and color anyways. I recommend sticking to 8-bit 120Hz HDR: there is no difference in experience. - 144Hz mode can be funky. It took several monitor resets to enable overdrive configuration, for example. - Awful speakers - Poor white uniformity. Both of my monitors had dim left and right edges which were clearly visible when browsing websites with light backgrounds. Other: My first XV273K had a backlight defect where the left-most edge would not light up fully to the same brightness as the rest of the monitor. Happy to report the replacement monitor has no such defect, and no dead pixels on either monitor. Conclusions: If you want the economical 4K 120Hz Freesync high color gamut monitor (not a 43" TV, for example), XV273K is it. If you want a more premium monitor (better overdrive for example) and run an Nvidia GPU, get the XB273K. If you want to experience the best PC HDR gaming available (outside of using a TV), go for the X27/PG27UQ. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2019 by J

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