I did end up going with alibaba due to how time consuming Taobao was figuring out everything I didnt have anymore energy to figure out everything with the forwader.Why don't you order through Alibaba? using chat you can talk with their sales and even ask for free shipping, which I managed to get. Plus I got a little bit discount as well on top of that.
what's your number in the end?Why don't you order through Alibaba? using chat you can talk with their sales and even ask for free shipping, which I managed to get. Plus I got a little bit discount as well on top of that.
Thanks. Yeah, when I tried this experiment, I did change the USB-C rate to 80 (aka. 2.1) and still no HDR option. I did, however, see your previous post and tried an HDMI cable again yesterday. Although I was able to get the native macOS brightness slider to show up and function as well as HDR, the default resolution of 3072 x 1728 was missing, and the closest options were 3008 x 1692, which I had to manually change, and I didn't think it looked as great. I also noticed when I had HDR working, all my apps seemed overly bright and blown out. The color wasn't as good. So I went back to the TB4 cable and no HDR and called it good. I actually think it looks really good. Thanks for trying to help.Using TB5 I had to change the Monitor menu under misc in the USB-C rate line to 80 then the HDR option appeared in the Mac display menu
There is also the Tcolor 32" 6K. I believe it uses the same AUO panel that's in the Asus.I did end up going with alibaba due to how time consuming Taobao was figuring out everything I didnt have anymore energy to figure out everything with the forwader.
I had to change the display color profile to iMac to get the colors correct. Also. I'm using a Mac Mini M4 Pro (TB5 ports) which may make a difference. I have the 3072x1728 showing in my Mac display panel so not sure why you would not.Thanks. Yeah, when I tried this experiment, I did change the USB-C rate to 80 (aka. 2.1) and still no HDR option. I did, however, see your previous post and tried an HDMI cable again yesterday. Although I was able to get the native macOS brightness slider to show up and function as well as HDR, the default resolution of 3072 x 1728 was missing, and the closest options were 3008 x 1692, which I had to manually change, and I didn't think it looked as great. I also noticed when I had HDR working, all my apps seemed overly bright and blown out. The color wasn't as good. So I went back to the TB4 cable and no HDR and called it good. I actually think it looks really good. Thanks for trying to help.
I got mine from ClickClack and I believe they just drop shipped from Kuycon. It came in two weeks and in perfect condition here in USA.These small companies have poor QA IMO. If you're lucky enough to get a good panel, then great, but the chances of getting a lemon are higher than if you're buying an Apple monitor, not surprisingly.
Isn't Click Clack just a reseller? I don't think Click Clack actually makes anything. BTW, I note that most of the Alibaba entries from the manufacturers for stuff like this have options for drop shipping direct to customers. ie. I'm not saying this is Click Clack, but some online resellers just order from the factory and ship it to you from the factory when they get your order, using the manufacturer's drop shipping.
One thing that struck me about the Kuycon monitors is how come they have a glossy glass front panel, when they appear to be using the same panel as the matte one used by Dell?
If you look at the bottom of the AliBaba Kuycon page for company information, there is an interesting video showing the manufacturing assembly and testing processes...
This shows the pronunciation of Kuycon as 'Kuyouke', like the company name. 😯
And shows the glass being applied to the front.
Also it shows the video board assembly for the 27" monitor (unfortunately back view only).
However you can tell that it is a bespoke PCB layout, created purely for the Kuycon monitor, so they seem to be commissioning the design of the parts they need.
In the company profile they describe themselves as an ODM, original design manufacturer, also selling items to be rebranded by someone else.
I wonder why LG 6K is not the case. Maybe Apple whitelisted it somehow? If I had Kuycon G32P I would take EDID from LG and put it instead of Kuycon's and then see what happens.People with the Kuycon and the Dell have this bug with DisplayPort 1.4 causing chroma being downgraded to 4:2:2, but on the LG 6K this is not the case
I don't know how to do that. Also, does it include the monitor serial number identifier? If so, I'd want to remove that.@EugW, could you export EDID from your LG to the public?
I wonder why LG 6K is not the case. Maybe Apple whitelisted it somehow? If I had Kuycon G32P I would take EDID from LG and put it instead of Kuycon's and then see what happens.
Are there any volunteers among Kuycon owners?
@EugW, could you export EDID from your LG to the public?
EDID version: 1.4
Manufacturer: GSM Model 30689 Serial Number XXXXX
Made in week 9 of 2025
Digital display
10 bits per primary color channel
DisplayPort interface
Maximum image size: 70 cm x 39 cm
Gamma: 2.20
DPMS levels: Standby Suspend Off
Supported color formats: RGB 4:4:4, YCrCb 4:4:4, YCrCb 4:2:2
Color Characteristics
Red: 0.6865, 0.3056
Green: 0.2050, 0.7177
Blue: 0.1445, 0.0595
White: 0.3134, 0.3291
Established Timings I & II
640x480 59.940 Hz 4:3 31.469 kHz 25.175 MHz (DMT)
800x600 60.317 Hz 4:3 37.879 kHz 40.000 MHz (DMT)
1024x768 60.004 Hz 4:3 48.363 kHz 65.000 MHz (DMT)
Standard Timings
1920x1080 60.000 Hz 16:9 67.500 kHz 148.500 MHz (DMT)
1024x768 60.004 Hz 4:3 48.363 kHz 65.000 MHz (DMT)
800x600 60.317 Hz 4:3 37.879 kHz 40.000 MHz (DMT)
Detailed mode: Clock 533.250 MHz, 697 mm x 392 mm
3840 3888 3920 4000 ( 48 32 80)
2160 2163 2168 2222 ( 3 5 54)
+hsync -vsync
VertFreq: 59.997 Hz, HorFreq: 133.312 kHz
Display Range Limits
Monitor ranges (GTF): 48-60 Hz V, 30-220 kHz H, max dotclock 1350 MHz
Display Product Name: LG ULTRAFINE
Display Product Serial Number: XXXXXXXXX
Has 2 extension blocks
Checksum: 0xf3
----------------
CTA-861 Extension Block Revision 3
Basic audio support
Supports YCbCr 4:4:4
Supports YCbCr 4:2:2
0 native detailed modes
31 bytes of CTA data blocks
Audio Data Block
Linear PCM, max channels 2
Supported sample rates (kHz): 192 96 48 44.1 32
Supported sample sizes (bits): 24 20 16
Speaker Allocation Data Block
Speaker map:
FL/FR - Front Left/Right
Video Data Block
3840x2160 60.000 Hz 16:9 135.000 kHz 594.000 MHz (VIC 97)
1920x1080 60.000 Hz 16:9 67.500 kHz 148.500 MHz (VIC 16)
1280x720 60.000 Hz 16:9 45.000 kHz 74.250 MHz (VIC 4)
720x480 59.940 Hz 16:9 31.469 kHz 27.000 MHz (VIC 3)
640x480 59.940 Hz 4:3 31.469 kHz 25.175 MHz (VIC 1)
Extended tag: YCbCr 4:2:0 Capability Map Data Block
3840x2160 60.000 Hz 16:9 135.000 kHz 594.000 MHz (VIC 97)
Extended tag: Colorimetry Data Block
BT2020YCC
BT2020RGB
Extended tag: HDR Static Metadata Data Block
Electro optical transfer functions:
Traditional gamma - SDR luminance range
SMPTE ST2084
Supported static metadata descriptors:
Static metadata type 1
Desired content max luminance: 117 (630.392 cd/m^2)
Desired content max frame-average luminance: 101 (445.755 cd/m^2)
Desired content min luminance: 32 (0.099 cd/m^2)
Extended tag: Video Capability Data Block
YCbCr quantization: No Data
RGB quantization: Selectable (via AVI Q)
PT scan behavior: Always Underscanned
IT scan behavior: Always Overscanned
CE scan behavior: Always Underscanned
Detailed mode: Clock 241.500 MHz, 697 mm x 392 mm
2560 2608 2640 2720 ( 48 32 80)
1440 1443 1448 1481 ( 3 5 33)
+hsync -vsync
VertFreq: 59.951 Hz, HorFreq: 88.787 kHz
Detailed mode: Clock 138.500 MHz, 697 mm x 392 mm
1920 1968 2000 2080 ( 48 32 80)
1080 1083 1088 1111 ( 3 5 23)
+hsync -vsync
VertFreq: 59.934 Hz, HorFreq: 66.587 kHz
Checksum: 0x44
----------------
DisplayID Extension Block Version 1.2 Length 121 Extension Count 0
Display Product Type: Standalone display device
Display Parameters Data Block (0x01)
Image size: 696.7 mm x 391.9 mm
Pixels: 6144 x 3456
Feature support flags:
Power management (DPM)
Audio support on video interface
Gamma: 2.20
Aspect ratio: 2.37
Dynamic bpc native: 10
Dynamic bpc overall: 10
Display Interface Data Block
Interface Type: DisplayPort
Number of Links: 4
Interface Standard Version: 2.1
Supported bpc for RGB encoding: 8, 10, 12
Supported bpc for YCbCr 4:4:4 encoding: 8, 10, 12
Supported bpc for YCbCr 4:2:2 encoding: 8, 10, 12
Supported Content Protection: HDCP 2.3
Spread Spectrum: None
Video Timing Modes Type 1 - Detailed Timings Data Block
Detailed mode: Clock 1345.110 MHz, aspect 16:9, no 3D stereo, preferred
6144 6152 6184 6304 ( 8 32 120)
3456 3498 3506 3555 ( 42 8 49)
+hsync -vsync
VertFreq: 60.021 Hz, HorFreq: 213.374 kHz
Detailed mode: Clock 663.100 MHz, aspect 16:9, no 3D stereo
6144 6152 6184 6304 ( 8 32 120)
3456 3473 3481 3505 ( 17 8 24)
+hsync -vsync
VertFreq: 30.011 Hz, HorFreq: 105.187 kHz
Checksum: 0xe0
Checksum: 0x90
yes, that's interesting.there is also a separate setting of 3008x1692 that is offered, without any additional software hacks necessary
thanks. But as I understood from this post to be overwritten via BetterDisplay EDID should be in binary form.Code:
I cannot provide raw to you. it contains serial#.thanks. But as I understood from this post to be overwritten via BetterDisplay EDID should be in binary form.
I personally don't need it because I don't have the monitor but I hope serial # can be redacted via EDID editor (however I don't think that publishing of a serial # could cause any harm).I cannot provide raw to you. it contains serial#
Not accurate, there is a difference when enabling HDR on the G32P. It’s not as noticeable as on my MacBook Pro, but it’s definitely there, and HDR photos and videos do look better.Folks, those of you trying to enable HDR on this monitor are wasting your time. Just accept it as a non-HDR monitor. Even if you get it working, this is an IPS panel and the brightness for good HDR just isn't there.
Take this monitor for what it is, a very nicely designed monitor with a good glossy screen. Ignore the 'pseudo' HDR functionality.
I'm still on the fence as I ideally want something with a built in KVM, but otherwise would have gone all in on this thing.
I agree it is better but not like night and day. I have been comparing this with my Studio Display although since the Studio Display is smaller it is kind of hard to compare since not apples to apples.Not accurate — there is a difference when enabling HDR on the G32P. It’s not as noticeable as on my MacBook Pro, but it’s definitely there, and HDR photos and videos do look better.
Do you have a link to that post?Anyone experience any issues with G32P after upgrading to Tahoe? Saw some post earlier Kuycon recommended hold of on the upgrade.
Here is the link https://forums.macrumors.com/thread...x3456-ips-black-monitor.2459111/post-34139173Do you have a link to that post?
I did see someone on reddit saying his G32P didn't work on Thunderbolt 4 with the Tahoe beta several months ago.
However, it worked with a Thunderbolt 5 cable. These are the types of bugs I hate dealing with.
No issue with Tahoe 26.1 using my Mac Mini M4 pro with TB5 cable. I even have HDR activated. The G32P monitor is working great.
Thanks. Heh, I even had liked that post, but I didn't remember it.
The reddit post I linked mentioned that it didn't work on Tahoe with a TB4 cable, but it worked fine with a TB5 cable. That was with an M2 Max I believe, despite the fact that M2 Max doesn't support TB5.No issue with Tahoe 26.1 using my Mac Mini M4 pro with TB5 cable. I even have HDR activated. The G32P monitor is working great.
No issue with Tahoe 26.1 using my Mac Mini M4 pro with TB5 cable. I even have HDR activated. The G32P monitor is working great.
I should also note that the system worked great when I also tested using an HDMI cable.Thanks. Heh, I even had liked that post, but I didn't remember it.
The reddit post I linked mentioned that it didn't work on Tahoe with a TB4 cable, but it worked fine with a TB5 cable. That was with an M2 Max I believe, despite the fact that M2 Max doesn't support TB5.
You are using a TB5 cable and your M4 Pro supports TB5, so it shouldn't affect you.
The issue does not occur on HDMI AFAIK. If I understand it correctly, it's an issue specifically with Thunderbolt 4 setups.I should also note that the system worked great when I also tested using an HDMI cable.