AVS › AVS Forum › Video Components › Home Theater Computers › HD 4000 : not happy.
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:

HD 4000 : not happy.

post #1 of 11
Thread Starter 
Hey folks,

I've had a small Brazos HTPC setup on a 46" plasma for a while and have been quite happy with it.

With the advent of a 55" led replacing the ageing CRT in the den I decided I wanted a HTPC there as well so I set out building an i3-3225 on a Z77 board. I use Win 7 (licenced) and XBMC. DXVA is switched on.

Now I'm unhappy with the picture quality. It just seems...too clear. Too much contrast or something. I can't put my finger on it. Best way to describe it is the picture is cold and hard. Cartoonesque, almost.
Watching normal HD TV is fine.

I've been unable to narrow it down. Could it have something to do with refresh rates or something ?

I've been searching this here forum but the information ios somewhat overwhelming. Please help.

Thanks,

Pete
post #2 of 11
Is your tv on 'dynamic' mode?
post #3 of 11
TV calibration settings (contrast, brightness, color, etc) are typically source independent. You need to calibrate the settings on the input to which the HTPC is connected.
post #4 of 11
Sounds like a levels mismatch - specifically outputting PC levels (0-255) to a display set for Video levels. (16-235)
post #5 of 11
Quote:
Originally Posted by vladd View Post

TV calibration settings (contrast, brightness, color, etc) are typically source independent. You need to calibrate the settings on the input to which the HTPC is connected.

Agreed. Great advice.
post #6 of 11
I messed with this for hours and finally decided to put my gt430 back in. The people look like they suffer from rigor mortis and the best I can describe it.

It would be funny but wasting time trying to calibrate the PC to a perfectly calibrated (grey scale too) wasn't. There was not a single setting that I could even come close to matching the output of my discrete video card.

0-225 or whatever they call it in the Intel control panel looked great but it never would stick. If I right clicked the mouse it would go back to limited or 16-235.
post #7 of 11
Quote:
Originally Posted by AnthonyB View Post

I messed with this for hours and finally decided to put my gt430 back in. The people look like they suffer from rigor mortis and the best I can describe it.

It would be funny but wasting time trying to calibrate the PC to a perfectly calibrated (grey scale too) wasn't. There was not a single setting that I could even come close to matching the output of my discrete video card.

0-225 or whatever they call it in the Intel control panel looked great but it never would stick. If I right clicked the mouse it would go back to limited or 16-235.

There's been some discussion about this recently. I think it takes a registry hack to make it stick.
post #8 of 11
I think that is the nvidia fix. Not Intel.

I meant to say calibrating a PC to a TV that is already perfectly calibrated
post #9 of 11
Two things-1. There is a recent update to the HD 4000 software so you might check to see if you have the most recent version and 2. There is another recent thread which ends up recommending using a Radeon 7770 graphics board. I just installed a Sapphire Radeon Vapor X OC1 1GB GDDR 5 graphics board to solve cadence problems with playing DVDs. HD 4000 got some good press when first released, but graphic board have a habit of leap frogging each other. I was trying to create a system that did not need a graphics board. However, I expected one day I would need to add a graphics board. That day came sooner than I expected.
post #10 of 11
Thread Starter 
Thanks for the kind suggestions.

I've fiddled with the TV settings but to no avail. Improvements are marginal at best.

I will try running it off a discrete card to see if it improves. Funny thing is : I plug in the old Brazos box and everything is fine from the get-go.

Pete
post #11 of 11
New Posts  All Forums:Forum Nav:
  Return Home
  Back to Forum: Home Theater Computers
AVS › AVS Forum › Video Components › Home Theater Computers › HD 4000 : not happy.