Ultra-wide monitors
Moderator: James Steele
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Here's where to talk about preamps, cables, microphones, monitors, etc.
Here's where to talk about preamps, cables, microphones, monitors, etc.
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- Posts: 7
- Joined: Tue Sep 27, 2016 11:22 am
- Primary DAW OS: MacOS
Ultra-wide monitors
Is anyone using a single ultra-wide computer monitor with DP? Like 34"? In the process of replacing equipment and wondering if a single monitor of this size is at all practical. Concerned that going with dual 27-29" monitors would put my near field audio monitors too far apart - pushing me back from the screens to still create an equidistant listening triangle between my head and speakers. Have used dual monitors for years.
MacBook Pro touch bar, Late 2016; 2.7 GHz i7; 16GB RAM; 500 GB SSD / MOTU 828 mkII / DP 9.12; Mach 5 III / Omnisphere, Stylus RMX, Trillian / Kontact 5 / NI Komplete 11
- HCMarkus
- Posts: 10376
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- Location: Rancho Bohemia, California
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Re: Ultra-wide monitors
I've got a 34" (non-4k) ultra wide in the home, but am using dual 24s (plus a 19 off to the side) in the studio. I like the ultra wide aspect ratio for productivity, but have not tried it for DAW work. My non-4k LG ultra wide would reduce the available working space from my current setup.
I think a 34" 4k monitor could be excellent for DAW use, but a 40-45" 16:10 aspect ratio 4k monitor would be even better! Although curved displays don't make sense for TV watching from a distance, a curved display would be ideal when working in the studio, since you are close enough for the curve to reduce the off-axis dimming you would experience with a large flat display.
When going 4k, make sure your GPU can drive the additional pixels needed. As noted in a recent thread I started here at MOTUNation, I just put an AMD RX460 (Gigabyte 4GB version) in my studio Mac; a GPU such as this will drive 4k @ 60Hz easily. Not an issue for you with your new MacBook Pro.
I think a 34" 4k monitor could be excellent for DAW use, but a 40-45" 16:10 aspect ratio 4k monitor would be even better! Although curved displays don't make sense for TV watching from a distance, a curved display would be ideal when working in the studio, since you are close enough for the curve to reduce the off-axis dimming you would experience with a large flat display.
When going 4k, make sure your GPU can drive the additional pixels needed. As noted in a recent thread I started here at MOTUNation, I just put an AMD RX460 (Gigabyte 4GB version) in my studio Mac; a GPU such as this will drive 4k @ 60Hz easily. Not an issue for you with your new MacBook Pro.
- Gravity Jim
- Posts: 2006
- Joined: Wed Apr 30, 2008 2:55 am
- Primary DAW OS: MacOS
- Location: Santa Rosa, CA
Re: Ultra-wide monitors
I just looked into this (thinking of replacing my dual 23" displays), and came to these conclusions:
1. Two larger displays or one huge display running at a vertical resolution of 1080p will display the same amount of information I am currently seeing, only a little bigger.
2. Two larger displays or one huge display running at a higher vertical resolution will just make the already teensy fonts in DP even smaller and harder to read.
3. It's fine the way it is.
1. Two larger displays or one huge display running at a vertical resolution of 1080p will display the same amount of information I am currently seeing, only a little bigger.
2. Two larger displays or one huge display running at a higher vertical resolution will just make the already teensy fonts in DP even smaller and harder to read.
3. It's fine the way it is.
Jim Bordner
MacPro 5,1 (3.33Ghz 12-core), 32g RAM, OS X 10.14.6 • MOTU DP 10.11 • Logic Pro X 10.2.5 • Waves Platinum, UAD-2, Slate Digital, Komplete, Omnisphere 2, LASS, CineSamples, Chipsounds, V Collection 5[color]
MacPro 5,1 (3.33Ghz 12-core), 32g RAM, OS X 10.14.6 • MOTU DP 10.11 • Logic Pro X 10.2.5 • Waves Platinum, UAD-2, Slate Digital, Komplete, Omnisphere 2, LASS, CineSamples, Chipsounds, V Collection 5[color]