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ViewSonic VX3276-4K-MHD 32 Inch 4K UHD Monitor with Ultra-Thin Bezels, HDR10 HDMI and DisplayPort for Home and Office

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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Wednesday, Jan 1
Order within 22 minutes
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Style: 32-Inch 4K


Pattern Name: Monitor


Features

  • FORM & FUNCTION: With ultra-slim bezels design, 4K UHD (3840x2160p) resolution, and 80M:1 dynamic contrast ratio, this monitors look as good as it performs
  • Viewing Angle is 178 (H) / 178 (V); Aspect Ratio is 16:9
  • HDR10 CONTENT SUPPORT: Displays videos as they are intended to be seen giving you a fuller, more immersive viewing experience
  • ENHANCED VIEWING COMFORT: Flicker-Free technology and Blue Light Filter for all-day comfort
  • FLEXIBLE CONNECTIVITY: The VX3276-4K-MHD supports laptops, PCs, and Macs with HDMI, DisplayPort, and Mini DisplayPort inputs
  • INCLUDED IN THE BOX: LCD Monitor, Power Cable, HDMI Cable

Description

The ViewSonic VX3276-4K-MHD is a sleek 32” (31 5" Viewable) 4K UHD monitor with a modern and minimalist style perfect for home use With Super clear MVA panel technology and 80M 1 Dynamic contrast Ratio This monitor offers best-in- class screen performance with ultra-wide viewing angles A sleek edge-to-edge frameless design combined with stunning 3840 x 2560 resolution provides incredibly sharp and detailed visuals while HDR10 content support delivers a high Dynamic Range of vivid color and contrast for incredible screen performance Versatile HDMI DisplayPort and Mini DisplayPort inputs offer flexible connectivity options for both computing and gaming while an exclusive view mode feature provides intuitive presets for optimized screen performance in different applications With view Sonic's industry-leading 3-year limited This monitor is a solid long-term investment that combines style and high performance for the home.


Standing screen display size: ‎32 Inches


Screen Resolution: ‎4K (3840x2160)


Max Screen Resolution: ‎3840 x 2160 Pixels


Brand: ‎ViewSonic


Series: ‎VX3276-4K-MHD


Item model number: ‎VX3276-4K-MHD


Item Weight: ‎15 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎9.1 x 19.9 x 28.1 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎9.1 x 19.9 x 28.1 inches


Color: ‎blue


Power Source: ‎10


Voltage: ‎110 Volts


Manufacturer: ‎ViewSonic


Country of Origin: ‎China


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Date First Available: ‎June 20, 2019


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Wednesday, Jan 1

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

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Very affordable. It's tricky to get the right settings. Fair bit of bleedthrough. Worst stand ever. Otherwise good potential
Style: 22-Inch Pattern Name: Monitor
There aren't a lot of decent IPS panel screens in this sort of pricerange. Only a few are even competition for this one -- most of them much older with fewer features. So for this range I'd say this one is a pretty decent choice and probably one of the better choices in fact. There are mostly just a few things keeping it from being great. First, the settings are just... bad. The default settings it offers for a lot of things are bad. In particular, if you set it for gaming it will, by default, set the "response time" setting to "advanced." Which sounds good, right? Except this does some sort of processing that actually creates significant ghosting (leading several people to believe the seemingly high latencies are just too high. But 7ms actually wouldn't result in the ghosting you see with this at all. In fact, that would be more on the order of as high as 15 or maybe even 20ms... My best guess -- and this is just a guess -- is that "response time" settings of advanced or ultra actually enable some sort of predictive image processing that does more harm than good.) Setting this manually to "standard" corrects the ghosting. I was able to play very fast-paced games with zero problems once I set that to standard, so the 7ms response time that scares so many people is actually fine. (And there are actually multiple ways of measuring response time -- in fact there are different responses that SHOULD be measured and provided to the customer but of course are not -- so 7ms is not actually as far off from what a modern TN panel 5ms or lower screen might actually do in actual practice.) Also, color and lighting settings are rather hard and confusing to get actually right. For example, sRGB actually sets a very warm rather than neutral color. I've had to manually set a lot. Unfortunately, I don't have anything to calibrate a monitor with (it's surprisingly hard to find anything for external calibration in fact -- I'm getting an ancient Spyder 2 for software calibration, but it really would have been better to find the right settings for changing the settings to be right.) When I set advanced DCR to 0, black stabilization to 50 (it's hard to figure this one out in particular, but so far I think 50 is closest to correct, but I'm a bit torn between 50 and 60 depending) contrast to 50, brightness down to my preference (35, probably just slightly higher would be a bit more ideal for many people,) and the colors to user controlled (100% each to RGB for now -- I need to figure out how to tweak this to get it more neutral still, but this is pretty good for a start) it gets pretty close to something that feels very neutral and realistic looking. Yellows in particular seem a bit odd though, so I'm still not quite sure and will be looking for a way to calibrate it better via these settings someday. Once you get the settings right overall it's pretty nice though and certainly good enough for most purposes (close enough even for many image manipulation purposes I think, though if you need 100% sRGB this won't do I'm sure.) I think with the right settings it could be pretty incredible in fact, it's just a matter of figuring them out (which I haven't quite gotten just yet.) With my current settings though most test photos, scenes of nature, and etc look pretty amazing now. One HUGE point against it is the stand is absolute crap. They really screwed the pooch on this part actually. First, you can't get a third party thing. No VESA mount holes or anything like that to work with. As far as I know the stand doesn't use any sort of standard connection (it's something that snaps into the bottom.) The problem is, it screws loosely into a single bar that goes up to the monitor. And no matter how tight you get it it can still be fairly loose. Now, to be clear, the flat wood desk I've set it on is almost completely level (less than a degree off. Nothing major.) But no matter how tightly I turned the screw (and it stripped the head a little I was turning so hard) the stand will not stay straight. For some reason it even leans away from the direction the desk is ever so slightly off by, so I know it's 100% the stand at fault here. And it just stands to reason that with just a tiny thin little bar screwing in like that there will be potential for this sort of problem. That's why most stands that snap in like this one does at least are much wider. I had to add so much padding to the left side that it raises it by almost a full FIVE millimeters. (Conversely my desk is off level by probably about two folds of a sheet of paper, not even a single millimeter.) Since there are no screw holes whatsoever you can't even use a third party stand. You're just stuck compensating for a screen that may or may not tilt severely. And honestly, this is the biggest reason I deduct two stars from its rating since once one gets the right settings they can share with others but fixing the stand being off level requires a fair bit of work. I got some foam material for only a dollar that I was able to cut and stick to the bottom of it in layers, so I guess this is easy enough to fix, but I do call them out on this horrible choice in design with this stand. It may be pretty to look at, but in actual usage it's just horrible. Especially sticking up on one side with material propping it up. I used a craft foam with a sticky back (1.5mm thick in this case) bought locally for only a dollar and I can't seem to find something quite equivalent to it here, but uxcell 2Pcs 12mm Wide 1mm Thick EVA Single Side Sponge Foam Tape 10 Meters Length might be a good choice for anyone else needing to deal with this in the same basic way. Finally the backlight bleedthrough isn't nice. This, unfortunately, is standard for cheaper IPS panels, so I don't hold this particularly against this one. This is only a problem if you're doing something with a lot of blacks like certain games and maybe some movies. Probably not much photo work but if you're looking at an IPS panel definitely don't look at cheaper ones like this. One thing to note here though: it's actually pretty uniform. Most IPS panels I've used are very non-uniform in their bleedthrough. Usually it's one or two corners and could be either the top or the bottom. And the bleedthrough tends to be pretty extreme. You'll have a spot that looks practically white while all the rest around it is black. In this monitor's case it's both better and worse. Where those are confined to a really small area this one has it much more uniformly spread out. Which means there's a much larger area affected by bleedthrough making blacks all around suffer, but it's also a lot less actual bleedthrough in each area in comparison so the blacks don't suffer as much where they do. Which one is better or worse is more down to personal preference than anything else, but I suppose overall this is less bad probably since it's more uniform and less disruptive. I think there is a LOT of potential here. I believe with the right settings it could have pretty amazing color especially. I think for its price range it might potentially even be one of the best options available. There are a rare few that can be cheaper and a few others in this range, but the visual quality is the most important in an IPS panel and I think maybe it might have an edge or two there for this pricerange. If you're willing to go up to ranges more like $500 then this is not the way to go, but for this low price it beats at least those others I've compared it with in actual visual quality after I set it right. The stand is a huge screwup, but at least it's not too hard to compensate with the right materials. I do not believe the user should have to do this though and packing material under one side to prop it up defeats any fashion benefits of its design anyway, so it just plain needs to go and be replaced with a real stand instead of the awful ultra-thin bar triangle thing. UPDATE: The Spyder2 arrived. After a lot of hard work tracking down drivers they've removed from their primary site I finally managed to find the old drivers from before they took them all down (ironically on their Japanese website.) It turns out their software supports calibrating the screen's built-in controls before creating a color profile. I found that with the standard 2.2-6500K calibration it told me to set the red to 100, green to 91, and blue to 88. This ends up being about 6467K which is as close as it could get with the RGB output as close to even as it will get (the blue is either too little or too much by a slight margin and green is off as well by a very tiny amount, but overall all three end up pretty close and well within the acceptable range.) Brightness can go higher and this will affect the output somewhat, but any brighter bothers my eyes, so I can't provide adjusted values at a higher setting. Curiously enough this is actually really close to what sRGB produces, however sRGB has way too much green according to the calibration tool. On the other hand, the ICM it produces after calibrating with manual RGB control overcompensates on the greens such that grays have a greenish tint to them, so perhaps the sRGB setting actually _IS_ accurate. Why it feels too warm to me I couldn't say, but if you want as close to sRGB as possible it may still be best just to use that built in profile. I'm also using the ICM that ViewSonic provides via their monitor driver though I don't see much difference with and without. Without something external or a newer, higher quality calibration tool to compare I can't calibrate better than that. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 9, 2017 by Joshua

  • 4 Inputs - HDMI x2, Display Port, Mini-Dispaly Port
Style: 32-Inch 4K Pattern Name: Monitor
The media could not be loaded. Updated: Lots to like about this monitor, however after only two days it has a flicker. See attached video. Its most pronounced on the windows login splash screen. I don't know if its broken or its simply trying to self adjust and is in some weird loop, but either way its not working properly. Its not always as pronounced as that screen, but that screen has a lot of black on it. I have a GeForece GTX 1060 6GB video card, not top of the line, but no slouch either. Original Review: It has 4 inputs and that super amazingly awesome! I connect three different computers to it, so having at least 3 inputs is super important. 4 is way above average on monitors. However the interface to switch inputs is via a crappy menu system and not a single button like others. This could drive you nuts. Also if an input is no longer there it will auto switch to something with an input. I cannot find any way around this in the menus. The information I was able to find before I purchase "implied" that it was a single button to switch inputs. So that part sucks when switching between computers. The screen is okay. There isn't anything bad about it. I find flesh tones are too red saturated. I would not use this for Photo/Video Editing. This is not that monitor, don't even attempt it, you will be disappointed. On the other hand for the price point, web-surfing and office type work is great. Compared to my 2k (1920x1200) monitor this is quite the upgrade and you will love real 4k and all the space you have. I bought the 32" and not a 27" and I think that was a good move. On Windows 10 you can scale everything on the desktop so it's not super tiny small. I found 150% is my sweet spot. 32" gives you a bit more room to maximize the zoom vs amount of desktop space in use. I might have needed 175% on a 27" monitor to get things to look the same size. Even though the pixel count is the same you need to factor in the actual size of icons and whatnot. 32" for me gives me more space. Text from applications is crisp sharp, there are no pixels that I can easily see. Compared to my old 2k monitor this is amazing! This is not an IPS panel, but instead, its MVA technology. The screen is really large, which is awesome, but its so big in fact that the viewing angle becomes important. The left and right if I'm sitting center is no longer 100% perfect because of the viewing angle. Not outrageously bad, maybe 10% worse to the right or left of what you are working on. I suspect IPS is better, but I didn't read up on it so I don't know. Finally it has VESA mounting holes (100mm x 100mm) and I was able to mount it on my monitor arm. I added the spacers since it could bump into their bracket if used without the spacers. There were no specs on the screws (it would be nice to put a sticker or put it in the manual so you knew what max length was supposed to be). I used M4x16's (x4 of them) (which is 16mm long) and that seemed to work just fine. That was through my VESA backing plate and spacers and it didn't seem to hit anything on the inside. It would have been super nice if they included 4 screws. Other than that its a good price for a brand name monitor, but there are plenty of monitors in the price range. I'm happy I have it, but I probably should have splurged for a more expensive display. If you are doing Office work you will be very happy once you get the settings adjusted to your liking. The thing that held me back from other brands was the lack of a dedicated input select button, which in the end this one doesn't have. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2023 by DoverNH

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