New Posts  All Forums:

Posts by sotti

Quote:Originally Posted by spacediver sotti, Unless I'm misunderstanding the results shown here , the i1pro performs quite poorly compared to the i1 display pro, in both low and high luminance ranges: (second graph) We've got a...
Quote:Originally Posted by spacediver ah... yes that looks quite a bit more expensive. the xrite naming system seems awful confusing btw. Is the i1pro you're referring to known as the i1 basic pro? Basic is the software package it...
I was referring to an i1Pro, not the i1 Display Pro.
Not really much you can do about primaries unless you have some sort of external control. Even then, you can only bring primaries closer to white, you can't push them back out towards the edge of the gamut. The color of primaries is a...
Quote:Originally Posted by spacediver thanks for the reply. If I understand the first article correctly, profiling my device to a high grade spectrophotometer would mean making a custom calibration table that quantifies the offsets...
Quote:Originally Posted by prsut Regarding to APL patterns you may read article from Master Of All Calibrators here The other side of that is, if it's just as easy to use APL patterns, it certainly does no harm to use them. You...
Quote:Originally Posted by Vic12345 Tv only has 2 point controls.A meter does not prevent the bright white patches from going super bright.I would think every plasma is a little bit different in how it determines brightness and...
Quote:Originally Posted by Vic12345 Thanks for replies.Just to confirm the problem I was having was color temperature and "gamma" between the brightest white patches and next darkest shades. Both things that can't accurately be done...
The FW900 really doesn't have a gamma control. In windows you can adjust gamma with the graphics card hardware LUT, but you'll need some software to write to it.
If you honestly care about the calibration of your TV, you've left out the obvious 3rd option. Calibrate it yourself. If you really care, learn what you need to learn and do it yourself. After learning a bit about what it takes to...
New Posts  All Forums: