At a moderate 30 degree viewing angle the Black Level Brightness increased by 19 percent to 3.7 cd / m2 and
Contrast Ratio fell to an abysmal 44.
At a moderate 30 degree viewing angle the Black Level Brightness increased by 88 percent to 0.31 cd / m2,
the Contrast Ratio fell to 280 and the Dynamic Contrast to 516.
The typical manufacturer 176 + degree specification for LCD Viewing Angle is nonsense because that is where
the Contrast Ratio falls to a miniscule 10.
Not exact matches
While the added PPI of the 6 Plus is noticeable (the
contrast ratio is also higher on the 6 Plus), it's just not a game - changing feature for me anymore given that once you get above 300PPI at these short distances the distinction starts to
fall away.
At a moderate 30 degree viewing angle the Black Level Brightness decreased somewhat to 0.42 cd / m2, but the
Contrast Ratio still
fell considerably to 556.
Its superb
contrast ratio of 915:1
fell just shy of the MacBook Pro 13's
contrast ratio of 1200:1, while the Dell XPS 13 and Huawei Matebook X
fell into a typical range for most laptops, coming in at 400:1 and 690:1, respectively.
One area in which the 9.7 - inch iPad Pro
falls short, however, is the
contrast ratio, where it scored 1,022.
Where this display
falls short is with regards to colour calibration, with the
contrast ratio being off.
While it's aspect
ratio is more commonly supported, it really
falls behind the Huawei X Pro in terms of brightness and
contrast.
These numbers
fall short of the Acer Aspire R7, which reached a
contrast ratio of 780:1, but beat the Dell XPS 15, which returned a
contrast ratio of only 360:1.