If you adjust your brightness, can you see all the black boxes?
http://www.shonk.org/Brightness.jpg
http://www.shonk.org/Brightness.jpg
Quote:
Originally Posted by mkedda /forum/post/16879982
Setup.
Nvidia 8700M.
DVI -> HDMI straight to Projector.
1920x1080p @ 60.
Nvidia set to 0-255.
Light scenes are AMAZING and PERFECT.
Dark scenes are TOO DARK and lose detail.
What is going on?
Quote:
Originally Posted by craysv1 /forum/post/16880484
Mike, that's not accurate... I have full blacker than black and whiter than white and no washed out colors... I use an ATI Videocard, CoreAVC and have my TV ISF Calibrated.
Quote:
Originally Posted by craysv1 /forum/post/16880699
Samsung 67A750 ISF Calibrated to the HD color gamut set to 0-255. Core AVC handling all my x264 duties (99% of my usage) set to 0-255 (although I have confirmed BtB, WtW on Xbox360, PowerDVD (Bluray) and DirectTV (HDNET Calibration)).
Connection via DVI-D to HDMI adapter from my HIS H467P1GP Radeon HD 4670.
Quote:
Originally Posted by craysv1 /forum/post/16881878
I don't... DirecTV for TV Viewing... I do download some x264 encoded TV Shows occasionally which obviously work fine with CoreAVC. Anything else is set to play with MPC Home Cinema with PowerDVD's MPEG2 codec (which works well with BtB/WtW on MPEG2 dvd ISO's) and whatever other codecs for other formats that come with the CCC Codec Pack
Quote:
Originally Posted by mkedda /forum/post/16879982
Setup.
Nvidia 8700M.
DVI -> HDMI straight to Projector.
1920x1080p @ 60.
Nvidia set to 0-255.
Light scenes are AMAZING and PERFECT.
Dark scenes are TOO DARK and lose detail.
What is going on?
Quote:
Originally Posted by craysv1 /forum/post/16883202
Well, I'm not home... I'll post all my specs, settings, etc over the weekend.
However, the TV has been ISF Calibrated... I have also verified with my iOne calibrator that all my colors, contrast, brightness and gamma are as close to perfect as possible on my HDTV when playing Bluray and x264.
I also verified, in the past, that not only CoreAVC was accurate but Mediaportal's internal x264 codec.
I'm assuming that most people who have issues are due to incorrect, conflicting or unchangeable settings between their TV and HTPC. I switched over from an nVidia card to an ATI about 8months ago and the nVidia was also calibrated properly.
Quote:
Originally Posted by PanamaMike /forum/post/16883400
I'm not challenging that your system is properly calibrated for your CoreAVC/x264 setup. However, I think it's important to point out a few things.
Color performance is influenced by a couple of things.
1: The sets capability.
2: The sets configuration, there are settings that can cause picture issue, set dependent.
3: The source material itself can cause issues. Depending on how it was encoded. 16-235 vs 0-255 this will affect how the final video looks like on your system. Things like CoreAVC can address that problem, but what about formats other than x264. My main need would be for Mpeg-2 HD OTA streams.
4: Hardware/Drivers: Some gfx cards have limitations to one or both factors...
I think the main thing to note is, you my be able to calibrate for a particular setup/source, but you may experience a bad picture depending on what you feed the PC. It's not that the set or system is not properly setup. It could just be an issue with the source material. As craysv1 has done, he's optimized for his majority use.
Mike
Quote:
Originally Posted by stanger89 /forum/post/16883244
Sounds like your TV is expecting video levels (0-235) and you're feeding it PC levels (0-255).
Option 1) Change your "Dynamic Range" setting to "Limited (16-235)". This will fix video but leave everything else crushed.
Option 2) Check your TV, see if it has an option along the lines of "PC" vs "Video" or "0 IRE" vs "7.5 IRE", or "Expanded RGB" or something like that. With the above settings you want it set to PC or 0 IRE or something like that.
Option 3) If that doesn't work or you don't have it. Try adjusting the brightness control up and see if that uncrushes black.
Quote:
Originally Posted by stanger89 /forum/post/16883244
Option 1) Change your "Dynamic Range" setting to "Limited (16-235)". This will fix video but leave everything else crushed.
Quote:
Originally Posted by jrwalte /forum/post/16883147
It also has to do with owning a Samsung LED DLP. Those TVs beat the crap out of most sets in color accuracy![]()