








Review: Tablet monitor that stands on it's own. Not a centiq alternative. Professional tool, consumer price. - UPDATE: 6/7 I'm adding on a star because I am extremely happy with the purchase after dealing with the hiccups, I haven't had any problems for months. I don't want to write that this thing has driver problems, because for the most part if you follow instructions and have a 3.0 USB port there really shouldn't be driver conflict with windows 10. However, if you use windows 10 on a 2.0 USB port, your drivers will crash every 10 minutes, and the tablet will draw only straight lines after the drivers crash. SO TO MAKE THIS AS PAINLESS AS POSSIBLE FOR YOU, IF YOU ARE GOING TO BUY THIS TABLET: 1. Use Windows 10, if you use the 5.X drivers for windows 7 and you have problems with stylus tracking, it's a conflict between drivers and graphics card, which is a lot harder to deal with than having it crash because of USB 2.0. 2. Have 1 USB 3.0 port available for use, to plug the tablet monitor into. 3. Make sure all WACOM drivers are uninstalled. 4. For all this information on how to install the drivers correctly and not just a small checklist [...] Anyway, the tablet once you get past the annoying driver issues(and admittedly my own stupidity for not looking to see if it's USB 3.0), this thing is a dream. It tracks amazingly, has good pen pressure, the drivers are idiot proof to operate. Customer service from pandacity is fantastic, and I'm probably going to stick with this company BECAUSE of their outstanding support. Legitimately the only reason I'm giving this 4 stars instead of 5 is because I had driver issues and a port issue that required me to buy a 3.0 expansion card for ports. Otherwise this things a dream. Granted, all tablet monitors seem to not be plug and play EVER, there's always problems. Once you work past the driver/ port problems, this thing works amazingly, is sturdy but not too bulky. Definitely think the price point for this is exactly where it needs to be. In my mind, the centiq alternative wins out. For less than half the price of a centiq, you pretty much get the same performance, the only thing you miss out on is pen tilt which honestly isn't worth 1000 dollars, and you get better customer service. I don't think there's any competition here once you get this baby working. Pros: -Tracks like a dream -Idiot proof driver operation -Sub thousand dollar price range for a professional tool Cons: -Driver installation and conflicts can be demoralizing till you reach that sweet light at the end of the tunnel -USB 3.0 or you'll be crying every 10 minutes to driver crashes -It can get a little hot(can be a pro if your hands are freezing cold in the winter) Edit: After building a new PC, this thing operates like a dream thus far. No driver problems, no pausing or glitching. Everything runs perfectly in adobe photoshop. If I have no problems within the month I'll come back and change my 4 star review to a 5. This product works on newer devices, legacy PCs with older 2.0 USB only ports will have problems with this tablet, but windows 10, USB 3.0 PCs should have no problem running this wonder product. Definitely satisfied with it. Review: 5 Stars for Panda City 3 Stars for the Tablet, but Please Read Why Because I Do Recomend It - I've meant to write this review sooner, but life has got in the way. I'd like to take you on my journey with this product, because it tells both about the tablet, but also about Panda City, who I cannot speak highly enough of and I would purchase again from in a heartbeat. I did my research before making this purchase. I even contacted Panda City asking questions, because I was leery about the drivers. After speaking to them, and because I was really wanting to replace my Wacom with an actual monitor/tablet that I could draw directly on, I decided to take the chance. The Yiynova arrived swiftly and was boxed very well. I was beyond ecstatic. It fit perfectly on the arm that I had also purchased. My pen was working. Life was great. The screen squeaked at first and I had to get everything set up properly, but it was performing much better than I expected. I liked it much better than my Wacom. In fact, where I had been certain I would never be able to fully emerge myself into digital art, just a few moments piddling around with this convinced me otherwise. I had a new art toy and I fully planned on using it to its full potential. Then I started having driver issues. I had been very careful to follow the uninstall/install instructions at the beginning, so I was slightly surprised when it started up. Still, I could restart, and it'd work...for awhile. Then it just kept getting worse, until eventually after a Windows update, it completely stopped recognizing the pen. Mind you, I had already used it quite a bit and I was in love. I had several projects I was working on, and I spent hours each day adjusting myself to it. So I was determined to make it work, because a Cintiq just wasn't in my budget. My determination didn't seem to matter though, because it's apparently just not compatible with my graphics driver (NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960). I both spoke in email and on the phone with Panda City, and the man I spoke with (I will leave his name out for his privacy) was absolutely fabulous, considerate, kind, and helpful. We tried a variety of ways to try and get it to work, and he stayed supportive, patient, and positive in spite of my lack of computer skills. Upon the realization that I had the GTX 960, we tried getting it to work by unplugging my other monitor entirely, but no matter what, I could no longer get the pen to register. They were swift to send a return shipping label and to refund my purchase as soon as I got everything shipped back to them. I would definitely give Panda City 10 stars if I could, as they have the best customer service I have experienced in a long time. The reason I am giving the Yiynova 3 stars is as follows. The biggest thing being, it simply doesn't work with my graphics card. My understanding when I purchased this computer was that this graphics card is supposed to be great for both digital work and gaming. At first the lines were lovely, but then jittering became a problem. I don't know if this had to do with the card or the Yiynova, but I do wish to comment on it, just in case. The remote control plugs in to the right side, has a short wire, and doesn't suction well, which made it cumbersome to use since I am right handed. For the additional cost, I would expect it to have a longer cord, or pluggable from either side. Were I to have kept the tablet, I'd have just added some velcro to make it more secure, but I shouldn't have to. I did have a problem getting it to work in one of my programs, but it worked very well in Photoshop, which is what I normally use. It's hd setting wasn't as bright as my other monitor by a considerable difference, and I could not get it anywhere close to that brightness even at 100%. I also had to rig up something to keep the power chord from coming out randomly because of the weight of it pulling from where it hang from the monitor. All of this aside, I would still recommend it to someone who is looking for one of these as long as their driver will handle it. I had no delay issues. I didn't have a problem with glare or where the nib meets the cursor on screen(I can't think of the correct word.) I loved the smoothness of the glass, and the size of it is fabulous for doing painting or drawing. I was able to paint with my entire body instead of having to use my wrist like I do on my Wacom, and the difference that made cannot be stated strongly enough. I've never worked on a Cintiq, but if it really is all that much better than this, it must be pretty fabulous. Because this blew my Wacom out of the water with pen pressure, etc. I've always said I prefer working in traditional mediums, as to working with digital. This changed my mind. I still love my traditional, but if I could have a tablet/monitor of this size that works as well as this one did when it worked or better, I wouldn't be heartbroken if it was the only medium I was ever able to work in again. In fact, I could really see myself spending a lot more time doing digital artwork instead of traditional, had it worked out. For now, I'll be saving up for a Cintiq, and hoping that it works with my NVIDIA, but I'm really nervous there because I've read their Customer Service is awful, and I really don't know if this is a case where I'll be running into the same problems. If you're considering getting this Yiynova, I would just recommend that you call or e-mail Panda City first, and tell them what your Graphics Card is. If it's something that they believe would work well with it, then I'd say go for it. For the price, it's totally worth it. Just that brief time of using it really made going back to my Wacom tablet an experience I don't care for at all. If you're someone who is wanting to work in the digital field, I would hands down recommend getting this if it's between this or a non-monitor tablet as long as it will work with your graphics card, and of course computer. The difference it makes is night and day.
| ASIN | B01IRL7GVY |
| Brand | The Panda City |
| Color | MVP22U-DT |
| Compatible Devices | Personal Computer |
| Connectivity Technology | vga |
| Customer Reviews | 3.9 out of 5 stars 55 Reviews |
| Item Weight | 13.23 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | YIYNOVA |
| Mfr Part Number | MVP22U+DT |
| Model Number | MVP22U+DT |
| Native Resolution | 1920x1080 |
| Screen Size | 9.7 Inches |
| Target Audience | Teacher |
C**C
Tablet monitor that stands on it's own. Not a centiq alternative. Professional tool, consumer price.
UPDATE: 6/7 I'm adding on a star because I am extremely happy with the purchase after dealing with the hiccups, I haven't had any problems for months. I don't want to write that this thing has driver problems, because for the most part if you follow instructions and have a 3.0 USB port there really shouldn't be driver conflict with windows 10. However, if you use windows 10 on a 2.0 USB port, your drivers will crash every 10 minutes, and the tablet will draw only straight lines after the drivers crash. SO TO MAKE THIS AS PAINLESS AS POSSIBLE FOR YOU, IF YOU ARE GOING TO BUY THIS TABLET: 1. Use Windows 10, if you use the 5.X drivers for windows 7 and you have problems with stylus tracking, it's a conflict between drivers and graphics card, which is a lot harder to deal with than having it crash because of USB 2.0. 2. Have 1 USB 3.0 port available for use, to plug the tablet monitor into. 3. Make sure all WACOM drivers are uninstalled. 4. For all this information on how to install the drivers correctly and not just a small checklist [...] Anyway, the tablet once you get past the annoying driver issues(and admittedly my own stupidity for not looking to see if it's USB 3.0), this thing is a dream. It tracks amazingly, has good pen pressure, the drivers are idiot proof to operate. Customer service from pandacity is fantastic, and I'm probably going to stick with this company BECAUSE of their outstanding support. Legitimately the only reason I'm giving this 4 stars instead of 5 is because I had driver issues and a port issue that required me to buy a 3.0 expansion card for ports. Otherwise this things a dream. Granted, all tablet monitors seem to not be plug and play EVER, there's always problems. Once you work past the driver/ port problems, this thing works amazingly, is sturdy but not too bulky. Definitely think the price point for this is exactly where it needs to be. In my mind, the centiq alternative wins out. For less than half the price of a centiq, you pretty much get the same performance, the only thing you miss out on is pen tilt which honestly isn't worth 1000 dollars, and you get better customer service. I don't think there's any competition here once you get this baby working. Pros: -Tracks like a dream -Idiot proof driver operation -Sub thousand dollar price range for a professional tool Cons: -Driver installation and conflicts can be demoralizing till you reach that sweet light at the end of the tunnel -USB 3.0 or you'll be crying every 10 minutes to driver crashes -It can get a little hot(can be a pro if your hands are freezing cold in the winter) Edit: After building a new PC, this thing operates like a dream thus far. No driver problems, no pausing or glitching. Everything runs perfectly in adobe photoshop. If I have no problems within the month I'll come back and change my 4 star review to a 5. This product works on newer devices, legacy PCs with older 2.0 USB only ports will have problems with this tablet, but windows 10, USB 3.0 PCs should have no problem running this wonder product. Definitely satisfied with it.
A**R
5 Stars for Panda City 3 Stars for the Tablet, but Please Read Why Because I Do Recomend It
I've meant to write this review sooner, but life has got in the way. I'd like to take you on my journey with this product, because it tells both about the tablet, but also about Panda City, who I cannot speak highly enough of and I would purchase again from in a heartbeat. I did my research before making this purchase. I even contacted Panda City asking questions, because I was leery about the drivers. After speaking to them, and because I was really wanting to replace my Wacom with an actual monitor/tablet that I could draw directly on, I decided to take the chance. The Yiynova arrived swiftly and was boxed very well. I was beyond ecstatic. It fit perfectly on the arm that I had also purchased. My pen was working. Life was great. The screen squeaked at first and I had to get everything set up properly, but it was performing much better than I expected. I liked it much better than my Wacom. In fact, where I had been certain I would never be able to fully emerge myself into digital art, just a few moments piddling around with this convinced me otherwise. I had a new art toy and I fully planned on using it to its full potential. Then I started having driver issues. I had been very careful to follow the uninstall/install instructions at the beginning, so I was slightly surprised when it started up. Still, I could restart, and it'd work...for awhile. Then it just kept getting worse, until eventually after a Windows update, it completely stopped recognizing the pen. Mind you, I had already used it quite a bit and I was in love. I had several projects I was working on, and I spent hours each day adjusting myself to it. So I was determined to make it work, because a Cintiq just wasn't in my budget. My determination didn't seem to matter though, because it's apparently just not compatible with my graphics driver (NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960). I both spoke in email and on the phone with Panda City, and the man I spoke with (I will leave his name out for his privacy) was absolutely fabulous, considerate, kind, and helpful. We tried a variety of ways to try and get it to work, and he stayed supportive, patient, and positive in spite of my lack of computer skills. Upon the realization that I had the GTX 960, we tried getting it to work by unplugging my other monitor entirely, but no matter what, I could no longer get the pen to register. They were swift to send a return shipping label and to refund my purchase as soon as I got everything shipped back to them. I would definitely give Panda City 10 stars if I could, as they have the best customer service I have experienced in a long time. The reason I am giving the Yiynova 3 stars is as follows. The biggest thing being, it simply doesn't work with my graphics card. My understanding when I purchased this computer was that this graphics card is supposed to be great for both digital work and gaming. At first the lines were lovely, but then jittering became a problem. I don't know if this had to do with the card or the Yiynova, but I do wish to comment on it, just in case. The remote control plugs in to the right side, has a short wire, and doesn't suction well, which made it cumbersome to use since I am right handed. For the additional cost, I would expect it to have a longer cord, or pluggable from either side. Were I to have kept the tablet, I'd have just added some velcro to make it more secure, but I shouldn't have to. I did have a problem getting it to work in one of my programs, but it worked very well in Photoshop, which is what I normally use. It's hd setting wasn't as bright as my other monitor by a considerable difference, and I could not get it anywhere close to that brightness even at 100%. I also had to rig up something to keep the power chord from coming out randomly because of the weight of it pulling from where it hang from the monitor. All of this aside, I would still recommend it to someone who is looking for one of these as long as their driver will handle it. I had no delay issues. I didn't have a problem with glare or where the nib meets the cursor on screen(I can't think of the correct word.) I loved the smoothness of the glass, and the size of it is fabulous for doing painting or drawing. I was able to paint with my entire body instead of having to use my wrist like I do on my Wacom, and the difference that made cannot be stated strongly enough. I've never worked on a Cintiq, but if it really is all that much better than this, it must be pretty fabulous. Because this blew my Wacom out of the water with pen pressure, etc. I've always said I prefer working in traditional mediums, as to working with digital. This changed my mind. I still love my traditional, but if I could have a tablet/monitor of this size that works as well as this one did when it worked or better, I wouldn't be heartbroken if it was the only medium I was ever able to work in again. In fact, I could really see myself spending a lot more time doing digital artwork instead of traditional, had it worked out. For now, I'll be saving up for a Cintiq, and hoping that it works with my NVIDIA, but I'm really nervous there because I've read their Customer Service is awful, and I really don't know if this is a case where I'll be running into the same problems. If you're considering getting this Yiynova, I would just recommend that you call or e-mail Panda City first, and tell them what your Graphics Card is. If it's something that they believe would work well with it, then I'd say go for it. For the price, it's totally worth it. Just that brief time of using it really made going back to my Wacom tablet an experience I don't care for at all. If you're someone who is wanting to work in the digital field, I would hands down recommend getting this if it's between this or a non-monitor tablet as long as it will work with your graphics card, and of course computer. The difference it makes is night and day.
A**R
Loving the tablet!
Hello! Sorry it took a while to get to do a review on this, I needed time to really get a good feel for this tablet. So I did, and I can say moving up from a normal drawing tablet with no monitor on it to an actual drawing tablet monitor is just so amazing. The feel when you draw resembles drawing on paper. My drawings have came out better and even faster produced than with the other tablet, and I didn't even need to use a pen stabilizer to slow down the pen to get more control, cause as soon as you start drawing with this it has so much more control. I started myself off with the bigger monitor tablet and I am so glad I did. I never drew with a Cintiq before, but I am not complaining with the feel and style of the Yiynova Tablet. I would like to ask Panda City to see if you guys could make a stylus pen that didn't require any battery recharges or battery replacements. It's not a big concern for me now, but I've noticed that it was one of the other concerns that others had for Wacom substitutes. Also, the Stylus's pen tabs, the two skinny thin buttons that act as a mouse's left and right mouse button, could be just a bit more thicker or more popping out of the stylus so that you have a good feel of where it is and you won't accidentally hit it when drawing. That and I sometimes need to dig in a bit or press the buttons on the stylus a bit deeper so that I can actually hit it. If that could be fixed or worked on that would be amazing. And I believe if you can fix those two things with the battery dependancy and the very slim buttons, you will be looked at as the number one substitute for any tablet at a really affordable price!
E**E
Works great, when it works at all.
The drivers almost never run correctly. I thought it was because I had it hooked up to an older computer, so I went ahead and upgraded to a new computer this Christmas - nope. It takes multiple reboots to convince it to run the driver at all, and then more tinkering to get the drivers to function correctly. I have followed the troubleshooting steps recommended on their Facebook page without avail. Using it is so off-putting that I've basically stopped doing art digitally except for some pieces I finish here and there on my Surface. AVOID.
D**E
Real Cintiq Competition for Frugal Creators
I've been using the Panda City's Yiynova tablets since April 2014. I loved my MSP19U+, and I was dying to get my hands on their new IPS HD model. I got the tablet hooked up on May 12, but because of a bad power brick, I experienced scan lines that were innocuous at first, but became bigger and darker and more noticeable within the hour. I swapped out the power adapter for the old one I still had from my MSP19U+ after checking with the Panda City's support that they were interchangeable—same voltage, same amperage, different manufacturers. The older model was made by Honoto, and the new power bricks packaged with the MVP22U(V3) are made by Meikai. While the swap worked and appeared to eliminate the lines on the screen, the backlight died on me 24 hours later. The indicator on the front was lit, and my computer registered another monitor was plugged in, but the screen was dark. I've read a lot about the Panda City's customer service team, and they deserve a lot of credit. By the next afternoon, after some back and forth, they shipped me a replacement monitor, 2 new power bricks they'd stress-tested, and paid postage to return my broken model. They stand behind their products. So, since I've had the new monitor up and running since the 17th, I've got some thoughts to share. First, the issue of lines on the monitor has returned, however, I tried plugging it in using the enclosed DVI-I to HDMI converter and the issue went away immediately. I've been told by the Panda City's support that this has to do with the tablet having both a digital and analog signal, and they've offered to send along a DVI-I to DVI-D converter. I would propose that in the future, the wire to connect the tablet to the computer be DVI-D, instead. Not many computers still use analog hardware, and it would negate them having to package a fourth converter with their product. Also, on the subject of the DVI connector—I really think that going forward, this connector should not be hardwired to the tablet. It would save both rhe Panda City and their customers the hassle of repackaging an entire tablet up and shipping it back just to solve an issue involving the wire. Small malfunctions happen, and I'm sure many pet owners can testify to cats and dogs biting through essential cables. The Yiynova MVP20U+FE has moved past this old design quirk, so, with luck, the next MVP22U might, as well. The tablet feels good. Yes, the surface is glass, and that can be an adjustment, but as someone who works with a Wacom Intuos Pro 8 hours a day, I don't think it's a really taxing change. (There are filters online for purchase that would trade that familiar texture for a loss of brightness and possibly color fidelity.) The change to IPS is a welcome one. What few complaints I had for the MSP19U+ mainly involved its limited viewing angles. The MVP22U(V3) has come out swinging with a much wider range and a crisp HD screen. I haven't come across any dead pixels or light bleed (which I did notice in my old MSP19U+). Now, I'm not a big industrial design buff, but I think that having the plastic backing of the monitor come around the front and rise slightly above the glass screen is a bit off-putting. In a world where phone and display frames are beveled and smoothed to an obsessive degree, it looks a little cheap. On the other hand, the new pen model feels like a smarter upgrade from the last. It's more ergonomic and feels more thought out on the whole. You're still going to need to keep some AAA's handy, but in the 3 years I owned my MSP19U+, I can only remember changing the battery maybe four times—and I left the battery in the pen 24/7. I never use the eraser on Wacom's pen, so I'm not going to claim that the absence of it in Yiynova's models has ever bothered me. Also, kudos to the Panda City for including two with the tablet. I don't have much to say about the remote, since I don't plan on using it—a keyboard is more than enough control for me, but if it's your thing, it feels good enough. The buttons are snappy and the scroll wheel is responsive and satisfying. If I had to offer constructive criticism, the labels for each button, including the center of the wheel flash by a bit too fast on first impression. The buttons under the scroll wheel are also smooth and nondescript, so perhaps adding some kind of tactile indicator to one of them (like the bumps on F and J keys on a keyboard) would keep users from pressing the wrong button. Where the Panda City could really stand to do some work is their drivers. Buyer, be prepared to install and uninstall the drivers at least a few times in the lifetime of your tablet. Things don't always seem to stick the first time, and whenever Windows issues an update, I sigh and start the process over, again. It's not a big, purchase-killing problem, just an annoyance (also, go to the Panda City's website for drivers or check their Facebook page). Also, it'd be nice to see The Panda City clean up its presentation a bit. Professional photos of the products from all angles, a modern redesign of their website, and a professional copy person to clean up some of the broken English on their instructions and their specifications would go a long, long way to reassuring potential customers that they're paying good money for real quality. Coming off of a product line and presentation as polished as Wacom's is a big jump, but I know from experience that the Yiynova tablets are worth the competitive price—they just need to convince my peers. EDIT 7/22/17: Okay, so I've felt the need to retract a star, here, because the issue of the heat coming off of this monitor is starting to worry me. The surface of the monitor, just around the area of the power indicator gets HOT while it's turned on. I'm becoming concerned that this could damage the tablet in the long term. EDIT 10/2/17: The issue of heat seems to be a non-issue, at the end of the day. The tablet is still performing well, and the heat doesn't seem to have caused any damage to the hardware.
A**R
Fantastic product for professionals for a great price
Im a professional digital artist, I've had my yiynova for about two months and it's fantastic. I had heard hooking it up might be a little troublesome with drivers and whatnot but I had absolutely no trouble. Plugged in to the PC and it worked right out of the gate. The pen requires that you press a little harder than I would like to get full pressure but I hear they have an alternate pen that has softer sensitivity and I might try getting my hands on one of them in the future but this hasn't gotten in the way of my painting at all. Glass surface responds well to the pen, some people prefer a textured surface but i don't have any problem with it and you can get screen covers if you do. Only other small gripe is that the bottom of the screen gets pretty warm with use, but its barely an annoyance. Overall this is a great buy, especially for the price and I'm loving every minute of it!
R**S
Don't waste your money
Continual issues abound. It started off slow, like a bad date and then just cascaded from there. First it didn't want to turn on at all. Then it decided that the drivers it shipped with were wrong. Then after over an hour of searching, I finally got the right drivers in so it'd work and lo and behold guess what! The stylus doesn't work save for the barrel buttons that I've turned off already in every place it'll let me turn things off. Okay so another hour later and I get that fixed and get back into the driver settings to try and calibrate and...well you see where this is going right? I can't calibrate the stylus. It's been days. It just won't and there's nothing I can find that'll help me with it. More than that, these drivers are interacting with programs that have absolutely nothing to do with the digitiser and now I'm performing triage on a brand new computer. But what's it like drawing on it, you ask? Terrible. Actually terrible. The lines it produces will jitter intensely no matter how still you are or how high you turn stabilisation up if you have a program that supports it. It's slow and clunky and most of the time doesn't want to function. The pressure sensitivity is just shy of all or nothing and if you have a light hand in the first place you may as well not bother because it just won't want to register delicate linework and when you push just a little harder, you get a blob. I have my program hot keys memorised so I never bothered with the USB keypad thing, though enough people have complained about it that I expect that won't work either. Edited 8/30 - The Panda City was kind enough to allow me to return the item for a full refund and I've edited the stars accordingly to reflect the responses I received from their customer service staff. I still don't like the product. I don't think it was the right fit for me personally, but the company did their best to resolve the issues I was having though ultimately they couldn't be and the frustration soured me on the entire product.
A**R
Lovin It!
After doing a thorough review of the Yiynova 22U I decided it was best to upgrade from windows 7 to 8 for driver compatibility with the +RH USB device. Additionally I bought a USB 3 PCI express card for my 4 year old laptop to avoid the problem with USB 2 power issues under windows 8 and 10. The only problems I had were upgrading to Windows 8. Both my WiFi adapter and graphics card drivers were incompatible with Windows 8 and it automatically installed an incompatible NVidia driver. As for as the Yiynova goes I have to say it's been (almost) nothing but a pleasure to use. The monitor is beautiful and looks better than the one in my Toshiba gaming laptop hands down. Set up and installation were a breeze as I downloaded and installed their latest driver from the Panda City website. Now I only have experience with a Wacom Bamboo and Intuos 12" but as far as I'm concerned this is a great (not perfect) machine and I've used it a lot. Initially the pen would freeze up occasionally for about 5 seconds but after going into the Manga Studio preferences and switching from Wintab to Tablet PC this issue went away. A couple of very minor issues are getting used to the pen which has a two way button very near the tip which I am still not used to and sometimes after clicking the upper button which defaults as a color selector it switches color in the middle of drawing. But this is a minor issue and I have been able to adjust by holding the pen closer to the tip to compensate. The RH device is very handy and I use it all the time, especially for switching between pen and pencil, undo/redo, eraser, hand tool and zoom in/out with the ring. In fact it would be nice to have one or two more buttons as I find the button in the middle of the ring to be practically useless as it is not programmable. Also on one occasion after I activated my Geoforce Experience software it immediately downloaded an update then my Yiynova Wintab driver disappeared from my system tray and I lost the functionality of the RH controller. An easy fix was just to uninstall the Tablet Driver and then reinstall it. I have been using it extensively for about 8 weeks now and I am more than satisfied and would not hesitate to recommend this device to anyone with the caveat of be prepared against driver problems by 1st, upgrade to Windows 8 (or 10 if you want the RH device) and do not use this device unless you either have USB 3 OR you can upgrade to it as I did. I did try to use the Yiynova with my USB 2 port instead of USB 3 and I did in fact lose pressure sensitivity. Another option would be to try Windows 7 and either forget about the RH or hope that you can use it with the newer driver.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
1 month ago