WUXGA (1920x1200) to DCI 4K (4096x2160) for Screen Resolution Comparison

1 WUXGA (1920x1200) = 0.260417 DCI 4K (4096x2160) · pixel-load comparison using the fixed width × height ratio of both formats

Direct Answer

1 WUXGA (1920x1200) has the same pixel load as 0.260417 DCI 4K (4096x2160)

This result uses the fixed pixel-count ratio between WUXGA (1920x1200) and DCI 4K (4096x2160).

For 2 WUXGA (1920x1200), this matches the pixel load of 0.520833 DCI 4K (4096x2160).

Converter Calculator

0.260417 DCI 4K (4096x2160)

Switch

Explanation

WUXGA (1920x1200) is 1920x1200 (2.304 MP), while DCI 4K (4096x2160) is 4096x2160 (8.84736 MP). The conversion factor is 2304000/8847360 = 0.260416666667.

WUXGA (1920x1200) to DCI 4K (4096x2160) compares the total pixel load of the two resolution formats, so calculator output and reference values stay on one fixed ratio path.

Keep the same direction when comparing render load, export scale, or equivalent frame counts, because the reverse route applies the inverse pixel-count ratio.

Method & Pixel Basis

  • Method basis: exact width × height definitions for both resolution grids shown in Direct Answer.
  • Applied mapping: pixel-count ratio between WUXGA (1920x1200) and DCI 4K (4096x2160).
  • Consistency rule: direct answer, calculator, and common values table use the same pixel totals and rounding policy.

Common Conversion Values

WUXGA (1920x1200)DCI 4K (4096x2160)
1 0.260417
2 0.520833
3 0.78125
5 1.302
10 2.604
25 6.51
50 13.021
100 26.042

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this conversion preserve aspect ratio?

Not necessarily. It compares total pixel counts only; aspect ratio may differ between the two formats.

How can I convert back from DCI 4K (4096x2160) to WUXGA (1920x1200)?

Use the mirror DCI 4K (4096x2160) to WUXGA (1920x1200) route; it applies the inverse relationship for the opposite direction with the same assumptions.

Can this estimate performance impact?

It helps approximate pixel workload differences, but real performance also depends on GPU, game/app settings, and pipeline overhead.