Back at CES in January, Dell announced the next step in personal screen resolution advancements. The recent rise of ‘4K’ (or more accurately, Ultra-HD at 3840x2160) monitors has shown that there is a demand for high resolution interfaces beyond a smartphone. Back when UHD monitors in a 16:9 format launched en masse, prices were high ($3500-5000+) and stocks were limited – I remember back in 2013 testing the Sharp 32-inch 4K display at a vendor in Taiwan several years ago in one of the first pieces to test 4K/UHD gaming. The fact that this was the only UHD monitor that GIGABYTE had in their HQ was a testament to how new the technology was. Now, 24-inch UHD displays can be had for as little as $350. We may see history repeat itself with 8K monitors from today.

As always, the first Dell monitors off the production line are designed to be high-end professional monitors. The UP3218K goes in at higher than average specifications, such as 1300:1 contrast ratio, 400 nits brightness, but also offers 100% AdobeRGB, 100% RGB and 98% DCI-P3. The UP3218K is part of Dell’s UltraSharp range, which means we should expect the monitor to be color calibrated out of the box to within a given dE value, typically dE < 3.

Specifications
Dell UltraSharp UP3218K
Panel 31.5" IPS
Resolution 7680 × 4320
Brightness 400 cd/m²
Contrast Ratio 1300:1
Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Viewing Angles 178°/178° horizontal/vertical
Color Saturation 100% Adobe RGB
100% sRGB
98% DCI-P3
100% Rec 709
Display Colors 1.07 billion
Inputs 2 × DisplayPort 1.4
Connectivity USB 3.0 Hub:
3x USB 3.0-A Downstream
1x USB 3.0-A Downstream (power)
USB 3.0-B Upstream
Audio Line-Out
Rated Power Consumption 87 W

Naturally a question pops up as to how to hook an 8K display up, especially will all the bells and whistles. The display uses two DP1.4 inputs to provide enough bandwidth, which means that we’re typically dealing with the internal controller stitching together two 3840x4320 displays, similar to how the early 4K monitors did (but with a few more years experience on how to do it). It is possible that Dell supports a single DP1.4 cable, which would most likely use Display Stream Compression 1.2 to offer a visually lossless image as a single panel, however one may suspect that given the target market for this panel, a truly lossless image is probably preferred, even when dealing with two input streams.

Overall an 8K monitor offers 33.2 megapixels of coverage, which in a 32-inch (31.5-inch) form factor gives 280 pixels per inch. 33.2 megapixels is four times that of UHD, which is 8.3 megapixels. Users wanting to play some AAA titles at 8K on this beast are going to run into walls with memory bandwidth very quickly, however eSports titles should run OK. Using some undocumented tricks, a pair of tests in our new set of gaming benchmarks for CPU reviews can render at 8K or even 16K without needing a monitor, so you might see some numbers in due course showing where we stand with GPU power on this technology. It’s worth noting that Raja Koduri, SVP of AMD’s Radeon Technology Group, has stated that VR needs 16K per-eye at 144 Hz to emulate the human experience, so we're still a way off in the display technology reaching consumer price points at least.

From 2013 to 2016, the prices of UHD monitors fell from $3500-$5000 to $350-$500. Extrapolating this, users wanting an 8K panel on their desk in a more comfortable price bracket might have to wait until 2020 or so to get one. By then, 16K might exist, back at the $5000 price point. Maybe.

Dell’s UP3218K is now available to purchase on Dell’s website for $4999. Currently taking pre-orders, the estimated shipping date is set as April 17th for US50. Linus from LinusTechTips should be happy, as they just invested in a pair of 8K video cameras. Time to submit my own acquisition request…


Image from Wikipedia

Source: Dell

Comments Locked

94 Comments

View All Comments

  • damianrobertjones - Friday, March 31, 2017 - link

    Having a 40" screen, on my desk, in front of me, would look really, really funny.
  • hansmuff - Friday, March 24, 2017 - link

    That'd be pretty stupid because nothing can drive that resolution anywhere near 60fps.

    I'm excited to more up to 4K gaming once 144Hz 4K becomes feasible. And by feasible I mean 4K 144Hz HDR high quality screen for $800 and graphics cards to drive it for $500.
  • dstarr3 - Friday, March 24, 2017 - link

    This is not a gaming monitor. Nobody will be buying this for gaming.
  • saratoga4 - Friday, March 24, 2017 - link

    You can pixel double to 1080p and get full frame rate, but have 4k for actual pro work (which is what this monitor is meant for).

    4k gaming is 80% about epenis, 20% about marginal improvement over SSAA. The kind of person buying a monitor with DCI P3 isn't interested in dickwaving anyway.
  • willis936 - Friday, March 24, 2017 - link

    Well if you play csgo you may very well care if the head is 2 pixels wide or 4.
  • ZeDestructor - Saturday, April 1, 2017 - link

    > 4k gaming is 80% about epenis, 20% about marginal improvement over SSAA. The kind of person buying a monitor with DCI P3 isn't interested in dickwaving anyway.

    I insist on at least AdobeRGB on my monitors cause it makes my games and code prettier (by prettier, I mean better contrast between colours, which makes reading easier). Less so for pictures (cause most are sRGB), but eventually I'll get a better camera that does more than sRGB...
  • Hxx - Friday, March 24, 2017 - link

    its for a niche market for which the frequency should not be a issue. Even if one had $5k to drop on this for daily computing, gaming, etc they would likely go with a different screen
  • zepi - Friday, March 24, 2017 - link

    But where is my 5K 10bit colour depth single-stream DP 1.4 display, preferably with freesync or g-sync?

    It is nice that Dell keeps pushing the boundary, but we'd love to have practical versions of those yesterdays high-end models as well.
  • A5 - Friday, March 24, 2017 - link

    I imagine the new wave of HDR monitors will get you your wish in the next year or so.

    But it'll be $1000.
  • SharpEars - Friday, March 24, 2017 - link

    ... and HDR support along with the various color spaces at 100% and a high enough brightness (matte and not sparkly).

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now