Jump to content

VG278HE VS VG248QE

tonytony

VG248QE has 1ms less response time and its 24" rather than 27" but the VG248HE might have better colors

Spoiler

CPU: i7-5820k @ 4.4GHz Motherboard: Asus X99 Strix  Graphics Card: Gigabyte 980Ti G1 Gaming Memory: Kingston HyperX Fury 24GB (3x 8GB) Hard Drive: 1TB WD Green SSD: Samsung 950 Pro 250GB CPU Cooling: Corsair H100i Power Supply: EVGA G2 850W Case: Corsair 400c Mouse: Logitech G502 Keyboard: Asus Strix (mx reds)  Monitor: BenQ XL2730Z 1440p@144hz OS: Windows 10 Professional 64-Bit Laptops: Lenovo Y50-70: i7-4720HQ - 16GB RAM - 256GB SSD - GTX 960m 4GB - MacBook Pro (Early 2016) 2,0GHz i5 - 8GB Ram - 256GB SSD Phone: iPhone 7+

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

VG248QE has 1ms less response time and its 24" rather than 27" but the VG248HE might have better colors

i also think the 27 is 1080p and you better get 24 for 1080p

and 27 for 1440p

 

just my two cents :< 

Fractal Design Define R5~ Asus Maximus VII HERO~ i7-4790k@ 4.7 GHz. ~ GTX 980 Ti G1 Gaming ~ 16 GB Kingston HyperX 2400 HZ. ~ Samsung 850EVO 1TB SSD ~ Asus CD/DVD reader/writer ~ Coolermaster V Series 1000W~ Noctua NH-D15+ Noctua NH-A14 FLX x3-   BenQ's XL2420G Monitor  - Steelseries APEX M800 / Zowie EC2-A / Zowie G-SR

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

The 27" Asus 1080p monitors are obsolete now.  The only one worth buying would be the H, NOT the HE, because you get the built in 3D emitter (not sure about the glasses).

 

VG278HE is the 144hz version of the VG278H without the 3d emitter.

VG278H has better lightboost colors and less purple tint than the HE and less ghosting in lightboost mode than the HE.

VG278HE has 144hz but worse lightboost colors and more overdrive ghosting in lightboost than the H.

 

The 27" VG's were made to compete with the 27" Benq XL2720T.

All of the T series were replaced with the motion blur reduction Z series.

The 24" VG248QE has lower ghosting than either of the 27" monitors.

The 27" monitors were made as big screen variants of the 24" versions, since some people (like me) like having a bigger screen, and 1440p was not available in 144hz (and not even very many in 120hz at the time unless they were overclockable Korean monitors) and 1440p versions would have had a far too big performance hit in 2012-2013 when they came out.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

×