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Acer CB272 Ebmiprx 27″ FHD 1920 x 1080 Zero Frame Home Office Monitor | AMD FreeSync | 1ms VRB | 100Hz | 99% sRGB | Height Adjustable Stand with Swivel, Tilt & Pivot (Display…

Rated 4.88 out of 5 based on 8 customer ratings
(8 customer reviews)

Original price was: $149.00.Current price is: $139.99.

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  • Incredible Images: The CB272 27″ monitor with 1920 x 1080 Full HD resolution in a 16:9 aspect ratio presents stunning, high-quality images with excellent detail. The zero-frame design provides maximum visibility of the screen from edge-to-edge.
  • AMD FreeSync Technology: Say “goodbye” to stuttering and tearing. With AMD FreeSync, the monitor’s frames are synced with the graphics card’s frames, which eliminates screen tearing and provide the smoothest gaming experience.
  • Responsive..: Fast response time of 1ms enhanced gamers’ in-game experience. No matter the fast-moving action or any dramatic transitions will be all rendered smoothly without the annoying effects of smearing or ghosting. The 100Hz refresh rate speeds up the frames per second to deliver smooth 2D motion scenes.
  • Stunning Images from Every Angle: Thanks to IPS technology, Acer’s CB272 monitor displays color accurately up to 178 degrees. Share what’s on your screen with friends and family and colors stay true no matter what angle you’re viewing from.
  • ErgoStand: Acer CB272 has an ergonomically designed stand with -5° to 25° tilt, 360° swivel and a 4.7″ height adjustment so you can always find that ideal viewing position. A quick-release design lets you separate the monitor from its stand so it can be VESA wall-mounted.
  • Eye Safety First: Stay in the fight for hours with Acer EyeProtect’s Flicker-less, Blue Light Filter, ComfyView and Low-dimming technology. These features take into consideration prolonged usage and minimizes eyestrain from long gaming sessions.
  • 27″ Full HD (1920 x 1080) Widescreen IPS Monitor | AMD FreeSync Technology
  • Refresh Rate: 100Hz | Response Time: 1ms VRB | Brightness: 250 nits | Pixel Pitch: 0.311mm
  • Zero-Frame Design | Color Saturation: 99% sRGB | 2 speakers, 2 watts per speaker
  • Ports: 1 x Display Port 1.2, 1 x HDMI 1.4, 1 x VGA, 1 x Audio-in and 1 x Audio-out (HDMI Cable Included)
Standing screen display size

‎27 Inches

Screen Resolution

‎1920×1080

Max Screen Resolution

‎1920 x 1080

Brand

‎acer

Series

‎CB272 Ebmiprx

Item model number

‎UM.HB2AA.E01

Item Weight

‎13.6 pounds

Product Dimensions

‎9.2 x 24.1 x 17.5 inches

Item Dimensions LxWxH

‎9.2 x 24.1 x 17.5 inches

Color

‎Black

Manufacturer

‎Acer

Country of Origin

‎China

Date First Available

‎June 13, 2023

8 reviews for Acer CB272 Ebmiprx 27″ FHD 1920 x 1080 Zero Frame Home Office Monitor | AMD FreeSync | 1ms VRB | 100Hz | 99% sRGB | Height Adjustable Stand with Swivel, Tilt & Pivot (Display…

  1. Rated 5 out of 5

    stephane dupuis

    Très bonne ecran

  2. Rated 5 out of 5

    Day Trader Next Door

    Nice picture, good price. Well pleased for the money. The stand is taller than you expect, gets the monitor well above your hands and keyboard.

  3. Rated 5 out of 5

    Wen Chieh Chu

    I’m surprised by the quality of this monitor. No fancy features, but providing the essential functionality that you need.

  4. Rated 5 out of 5

    irasema

    es muy buen producto, lo malo es que no te dan factura ni garantía

  5. Rated 4 out of 5

    Daniel H.

    I bought this to use as my third monitor. I have a Gigabyte G27Q and an LG 24GL600F-B already, the latter of which is a TN monitor.

    I won’t compare it to the G27Q – that’s a monitor in a different price class, but this IPS panel somehow has worse colors than LG’s TN panel. I think the picture looks closest to my other monitors when the brightness and saturation are both set to maximum, but then very light and very dark scenes in games and videos look very washed out. The peak brightness and contrast of this monitor is very poor. I find this completely unacceptable for me personally, but do note that if this is your only monitor and you don’t have any good monitors to compare it to side by side, it probably isn’t so bad.

    75 Hz is nice, definitely an improvement over 60, but I would definitely recommend looking elsewhere if you want to game. 1080p at 27″ makes for very visible pixels, but that doesn’t bother everyone, and it was my own fault for not going for 1440p, so I wouldn’t count this as a strike against them.

    The stand is a highlight of this monitor, it allows for height adjust, tilt, rotation, and unlimited swivel. Even far more expensive monitors lack such a good stand. However, even so, a good stand doesn’t make up for a poor display. Plus, the little clip that appears to be intended for cable management on the base of the stand was broken when it arrived. The entire stand requires no tools to assemble and attach to the monitor.

    Design wise, the monitor itself has a kind of “double bezel”, where there’s an outer plastic trim, but that’s not the whole bezel – the actual display doesn’t stretch as close to the corners as you’d think if you just saw the monitor in its off state. The bezel isn’t that big, even so, but it does seem a bit bigger than the product pictures show.

    Some other reviews complained about this monitor only coming with a VGA cable, not HDMI or DisplayPort, but they seem to have gotten confused about the listing since it clearly stated that only a VGA cable is listed, and HDMI and DisplayPort are both only mentioned as available ports, not included cables. I do wish that they included an HDMI or DisplayPort cable, but considering the non-gaming target customer of this monitor, this is understandable.

    Overall, I think this monitor is good as a home office monitor, as it is advertised, so I won’t be too harsh on it for being unsuitable for my specific purpose. However, I will be returning it and getting something more suitable elsewhere.

  6. Rated 5 out of 5

    Wookieecantina

    For the price, this will do.
    The color is good, the monitors processes video signal quickly and the base makes for quick, easy adjustments up and down and also swivel side to side.
    I’m using this as monitor, feeding from my laptop, a Macbook Pro M3 Max.
    The only thing I can complain about is the sound quality. It’s honestly quite poor, as there appears to be little to no bass. But, for a monitor of this size and price, I can’t complain or expect anything too miraculous.
    For my application, it’s working quite well.
    High quality, powered speaker sets are available at very reasonable prices, so if needed, I’ll just purchase a set.
    I purchased this for using Fusion 360, so sound isn’t exactly an issue and currently I’m in no way a gamer. Thankfully MacBooks have really nice speakers.
    All in all, great monitor. Funny though, I always thought bigger is better, but this monitor when using a design program is probably the max size most would find reasonable comfortable to use, at least without moving your head side to side far too often.

  7. Rated 5 out of 5

    Josh White

    I bought two of these monitors to replace my old 27″ 60hz BenQ panels that I’ve had for years, because they didn’t mesh well with my newer LG 34UM69G-B ultrawide. I game on these monitors, and I needed something that matched the same specs: IPS, 1ms response, FreeSync, Display Port, 75hz (mixing refresh rates can cause some weird things with Windows, like if you’re watching a video on one monitor while gaming on another, it can cause the game to stutter and lose FPS regularly) as my ultrawide. The price is also a huge plus. Swapping to these has resolved my issues. Games on the ultrawide no longer stutter and drop FPS while watching a stream or YT video on another monitor, and the games that I span across all monitors are now fluid on all monitors with no weird hitching.

    Height adjustable stand was also a must. My setup has different uses, normal gaming, and sim racing. I needed to be able to lower and raise all my monitors depending on what I’m doing at the time. I previously used a triple monitor VESA stand to hold all of my monitors, but it was bolted to it’s height, and in order to change it I had to remove the monitors, unbolt it, adjust it, bolt it back together, put the monitors back on. That was just too much work, so in order to simplify things I decided having each monitor on it’s own stand that they could easily be moved. These raise and lower very easily, and hold their height with no issue.

    I’ve read a lot of reviews complaining about the screen door effect. That’s something you’re going to get with this resolution at this size. The individual pixels are larger than a 1440p or 4k panel, so if you look close enough you can see those individual pixels. I personally don’t have a problem with this, sure I can see it if I get close enough to the monitor, but at a foot away or more, it disappears. If you’re using your monitor that close, you may want to change how you do things.

    Calibrating the monitors to match my ultrawide did take some work, out of the box the settings were pretty bad. I used a combination of getting it as close as I could with the monitor settings, then fine-tuned it in the Nvidia Control Panel. This would be easier to dial in with a screen calibration tool, but I was able to match them all pretty close just by eyeballing it. Both monitors match at the same settings, so that was nice, being able to adjust one and simply copying the settings to the other. No fussing around trying to fine-tune them individually.

    The settings I settled on:

    Brightness – 100
    Contrast – 50
    Black Boost – 0
    Blue Light – Off
    ACM – Off
    Super Sharpness – Off

    Gamma – 2.4
    Color Temp – User
    R Gain – 55
    G Gain – 50
    B Gain – 80 (I prefer a cooler, whiter image)
    All Bias – 50

    I have FreeSync enabled on all monitors, and it’s working fine with a 2070 Super. I’m also using Display Port on all monitors.

    Nvidia Color Settings:

    Use Nvidia Settings – Enabled
    Settings were done under All Channels, I didn’t have the need to fine tune individual channels.
    Brightness – 62%
    Contrast – 0%
    Gamma – 0.80
    Digital Vibrance – 75%

    Conclusion: These monitors are a steal for the price. It has great specs, and once you tune it, a pretty good picture (I can’t speak for professional work, but if that’s your goal you’re probably looking for something more high-end than this with better color accuracy). Add to it that you get a good height adjustable stand, with the ability to go portrait, and this is a real winner. For a gaming/general use/media consumption monitor, you can’t really go wrong with this one.

  8. Rated 5 out of 5

    William M. Gibson

    I recently bought a 27″ AIO computer. I use a dual monitor setup, but all my extra monitors were 24″. I know you can do it, but it just didn’t look right to me to have a 27″ monitor paired with a 24″ monitor, so I was on the lookout for a relatively inexpensive 27″ monitor.

    Started out with an LG monitor at about the same price point. The problem was that the screen didn’t line up with my AIO monitor. About 2 inches difference in the height from the bottom of the screen to the desk. Not a huge deal, but again, it just didn’t look right to me, so then I was on the lookout for a 27″ monitor with an adjustable height stand.

    This worked out perfect. I can adjust the height so the monitor lines up perfectly with my AIO monitor. Looks great. Screen quality is very good. Bright (adjustable) and crisp. Perfect for what I do (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, PDF, e-mail, videos and web surfing).

    Moving up from 24″ to 27″ screens doesn’t seem like a big deal, but it really is. Makes a huge difference.

    100mhz refresh rate is a nice little bonus, since most of the monitors at this price point have 60 or 75. Not a huge difference, but higher is better.

    There are several reviews about receiving units that wouldn’t power up (DOA). I thought I had one too, but I didn’t. The problem is that turning the monitor on is very unintuitive. There is a rocker switch that says power, so you would think that is how you turn on the monitor. It isn’t. You have to turn the power on with the rocker switch, then you have to press another small, nearly hidden button to turn the monitor on. I was literally about to pack up the monitor and return it until I figured this out. I suspect that many of those who thought their monitor was DOA didn’t realize it was a 2-step process to turn it on. Very confusing.

    Overall, this is a good monitor at a budget price point. I recommend.

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